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Medals, Orders and Decorations 


To be sold by auction at: 


Sotheby’s, in the Upper Grosvenor Gallery 
The Aeolian Hall, Bloomfield Place 

New Bond Street 

London W1A 2AA 


Day of Sale: 


Wednesday 2 July 2014 
at 10.30am and 2.00pm 


Public viewing: 


45 Maddox Street, London W1S 2PE 


Friday 27 June 10.00 am to 4.30 pm 
Monday 30 June 10.00 am to 4.30 pm 
Tuesday 1 July 10.00 am to 4.30 pm 


Or by previous appointment. 


Catalogue no. 70 


Price £15 


Enquiries: 


James Morton or Paul Wood 


Cover illustrations: 


Lot 356 (front); lot 102 (back); lot 11 (inside front); lot 338 (inside back) 


MORTON & HEIDEN LTD 


Nash House St George Street London W1S 2FQ 
Tel.: +44 (0)20 7493 5344 Fax: +44 (0)20 7495 6325 Email: info@mortonandeden.com Website: www.mortonandeden.com 


This auction is conducted by Morton & Eden Ltd. 
in accordance with our Conditions of Business 
printed at the back of this catalogue. 


All questions and comments relating to 
the operation of this sale or to its content 
should be addressed to Morton & Eden Ltd. 
and not to Sotheby's. 


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Important Information for Buyers 


All lots are offered subject to Morton & Eden Ltd’s Conditions of Business and to reserves. 


Estimates are published as a guide only and are subject to review. The hammer price of a lot may well be higher 
or lower than the range of figures given and there are no fixed starting prices. 


* Tllustrated lots are marked with an asterisk. Images of additional items not illustrated in the printed catalogue 
are available online. 


A Buyer’s Premium of 20% is applicable to all lots in this sale and is subject to VAT at the standard rate (cur- 
rently 20%). Unless otherwise indicated, lots are offered for sale under the Auctioneer’s Margin Scheme. 


+ Lots marked with a double dagger symbol have been imported from outside the European Union (EU) to be sold 
at auction under Temporary Admission Rules. When released to buyers within the EU, the buyer becomes the 
importer and must pay import VAT (currently 5%) on the hammer price. 








VAT may be refunded to buyers from outside the EU under certain circumstances and if satisfactory evidence of 
export 1s produced within three months of the date of sale. 


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However buyers are reminded that it is their responsibility to comply with UK export regulations and with any 
local import requirements. 

Morton & Eden Ltd will be pleased to execute bids on behalf of those clients unable to attend the sale in person, 
subject to our Conditions of Business. Lots will always be purchased as cheaply as possible, depending on any 


other bids and reserves. This service is offered free of charge. 


Written bids should be submitted before 6pm on the day prior to the sale. 


Payment Instructions 


Payment must be made in pounds sterling and is due at the conclusion of the sale and before purchases can be 
released. 


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Please quote your name and invoice number with the instructions to the bank. 


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special arrangements have been made in advance of the sale. 


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Credit and Debit Cards. All credit and non-UK debit card payments are subject to a surcharge of 2%. 


Sterling Cash. Subject to statutory limits. 


Order of Sale 


Wednesday 2 July 2014 


Starting at 10.30 am 


World Orders, Medals and Decorations: 


Awards to D. Antonio Maria de Lancastre lots 1-10 
Austria - Romania lots 11-73 
Russia and the Soviet Union lots 74-112 
Serbia - Sweden lots 113-120 
U.S.A., including Lifesaving Awards (see also lots 321-322) lots 121-131 
Miscellaneous lots 132-135 
Miniatures: The Ivor Bush Collection (Finland) lots 136-146 
Miniatures: The Ivor Bush Collection (other World) lots 147-159 
Others lot 160 


Starting at 2.00 pm 


British Camapign Medals lots 161-305 
Other Medals lots 306-314 
Jewelled Military Badges lots 315-320 
Lifesaving Awards (see also lots 121-129) lots 321-332 
Awards to Sir Edward Sabine and his brother Joseph Sabine lots 333-334 
Other British Orders lots 335-338 
Gallantry Awards lots 339-356 


The condition of most of the coins and medals in this catalogue is described by the use of conventional numismatic 
terms. For an explanation of these expressions, or for any further information, clients are invited to contact us directly. 


SESSION ONE 
Wednesday 2 July 2014, starting at 10.30 am 
WORLD ORDERS, MEDALS AND DECORATIONS 
A Group of Orders and Decorations 


bestowed upon D. Antonio Maria de Lancastre, Physician to both 
King Luis and Queen Maria Pia, and to King Carlos and Queen Amélie, of Portugal 


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1 

*Austria, Order of Franz Joseph, Commander’s breast star, by Vinc. Mayer’s Sohne, Vienna, in jewel cut silver, with gold 

and enamelled centre, 78.5mm, with original Warrant of Appointment dated 5 November 1896 and related envelope 
£2,000-2,500 

2 

Belgium, Order of Leopold, Officer’s breast badge, in gold and enamels, width 40.5mm, chipped both sides, about very 

fine, with original Warrant of Appointment dated 3 November 1888 and letter from the Belgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs 

dated 21 November 1888 £150-200 


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8 
*Brazil, Sociedade Portugueza de Beneficienza no Rio de Janeiro 1883, breast badge, in gold, 40.5mm x29mm, 


extremely fine £300-500 





4 
*France, Légion d’Honneur, Officer’s breast badge, with eagle’s head hallmark, in gold and enamels, width 43mm, 


extremely fine £150-200 
Oo 

*Germany, Hohenzollern, Honour Cross, Second Class breast badge, in gold and enamels, 35.5mm, extremely fine and 
of excellent quality £600-800 
6 

*Germany, Order of the Crown, Third Class breast badge, by S. Friedeberg & Sohne, Berlin, in gold and enamels, 43mm, 
centres chipped, very fine, with original Warrant of Appointment dated 13 August 1888 £300-400 





7 
*Great Britain, Royal Victorian Order, Knight Commander’s breast star, reverse numbered 88, in silver, with gilt and 
enamelled centre, 73.5mm, centre lightly chipped, good very fine, with related neck riband and statutes £500-600 


Edinburgh Gazette: 25 November 1904. “Visit to England of their Majesties the King and Queen of Portugal.” 





8 

Italy, Order of the Crown, Commander’s set of insignia, by Cravanzola Succi Filli Borani, Rome, comprising neck badge, in 
gold and enamels, 51.5mm, and breast star, in silver, with gold and enamelled centre, 77mm, extremely fine, with Warrant of 
Appointment dated 31 October 1888 and related letter from the King’s Private Secretary date 1 October 1888 (2) £300-350 


9 

*Portugal, Order of Vila Vicosa, Grand Cross sash badge, in silver-gilt and enamels, with gold and enamelled centre, 
width 67mm, on incorrect sash, about extremely fine £400-600 
10 

*Spain, Order of Isabella the Catholic, Commander’s neck badge, in gold and enamels, width 53mm, reverse centre 
chipped, good very fine, with bestowal letter from the Ministry of State dated 18 November 1888 £300-400 


Other Properties 





11 

*Austria, Order of Maria Theresia, jewelled Commander’s neck cross, central motto FORTUDINE, central bar, reverse 
monogram all set with diamonds, obverse centre either side of bar set with rubies, border of monogram set in emeralds, 48mm 
(including suspension) x 34.8mm, extremely fine £20,000-30,000 


See also enlarged illustration on inside front cover. 


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*Austria, Order of Franz Joseph, Grand Cross sash badge, by Gebruder Resch, Vienna, in gold and enamels, 68mm x 
37mm, extremely fine, with sash £1,000-1,200 


13 

*Austria, Order of Franz Joseph, Officer’s Cross, in gold and enamels, by Vinc. Mayer’s Sohne, Vienna, 1912, awarded 
to Dr Hermann Legrand, Surgeon of the European Hospital, Alexandria, 70.5 x 39.5mm, with vertical brooch sus- 
pension, virtually as made, in fitted case of issue, with original Warrant of Appointment dated 6 February 1912 and a con- 


temporary French biographical off-print £1,800-2,200 
14 
Austria, Tyrol Campaign 1797, silver medal, 39mm, extremely fine £100-150 
15 
*Austria, a miniature Pilot’s Badge, in gilt and enamels, retaining pin bent, good very fine £150-200 
16 
*Belgium, Order of Leopold II, type 1, Congo Free State issue (1900-08), Knight’s breast badge, in silver, with blue enam- 
elled centre, width 38mm, centre slightly chipped, very fine and rare £600-800 
17 
*Belgium, Order of Leopold IT, type 1, Congo Free State issue (1900-08), Silver Merit Medal, width 34mm, good very fine 
and rare £300-400 
18 


*Belgium, Congo Free State, Arab Campaign Medal 1892-94, 32,3mm, sometime lacquered, otherwise good very fine 
and very rare, only 58 examples awarded to Belgian subjects between 1895 and 1911 and a smaller number awarded to for- 


eign participants in the campaign £1,400-1,600 
19 
*Belgian Congo, Order of the Star of Africa, type 1, Officer’s breast badge, in silver-gilt and enamels, width 38.5 mm, 
good very fine £600-800 
20 
*Belgian Congo, Royal Order of the Lion, type 1, Knight’s breast badge, in silver, gilt and enamels, width 39.5mm, good 
very fine £300-350 
a1 
Brazil, Republic, Order of the Southern Cross, type 3 (post 1932), Commander’s neck badge, by M. Stern, Rio, in sil- 
ver-gilt and enamels, width 62mm, in case of issue, extremely fine £70-100 
22 


Brazil, Republic, Order of the Southern Cross, type 3 (post 1932), Commander’s neck badge, by La Royale, Rio, in sil- 
ver-gilt and enamels, width 62mm, in case of issue, centre slack, good very fine £70-100 




















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23 

*Brunei, Most Blessed Order of Loyalty to the State of Brunel, type 1 (1959-84), Second Class set of insignia (Dato 
Stia Negara Brunei), by Spink and Son, comprising neck badge, in silver-gilt and enamels, width 60mm and breast star, in sil- 
ver, with gilt and enamelled centre, 85mm, in case of issue, extremely fine (2) £800-1,000 


24 

*Bulgaria, Order of Civil Merit, First Class set of insignia, by Rothe, Vienna, comprising sash badge, in silver-gilt and 
enamel, width 63.5mm and breast star, in silver and gilt, with gilt and enamelled centre, 91.5mm, extremely fine, with sash 
(2) £1,500-2,000 


25 
*China, Order of the Double Dragon, type 2 (1902-1911), Third Class, Third Grade neck badge, in silver, with silver, gilt 
and enamelled centre, with central sapphire and upper smooth coral, width 90mm, with portion of crimson riband, good very 


fine £1,000-1,500 
26 
*China, Imperial Envoy Medal 1896, large silver medal, by Heaton mint, Birmingham, 44mm, with original riband 
extremely fine and rare £1,500-2,000 
27 
*China, Prince T’sai T’ao Silver Merit Medal 1910, issued on the Prince’s military inspection tour of Europe and 
America, 40mm, minor edge bruises, good very fine and rare £1,000-1,500 
28 


*China, Yuan Shih-Kai Inauguration, October 1913, commemorative medal, in silver-gilt and enamels, with central 
photographic-style portrait of Yuan Shih-Kai, width 40mm, in case of issue and with original riband, good very fine 
£600-800 


29 

*China, Medal of the Administration of the Telegraph Service of the Ministry of Communications, First Class, 

Second Grade, in gold, reverse impressed 1, 36.7mm, in wooden box of issue, edge bruised, good very fine and very rare 
£1,500-2,000 


30 
*China, Order of Merit of the of the Ministry of Communications, Superior Grade, in silver-gilt and enamels, width 
52mm, with original riband, extremely fine £800-1,200 
31 
*China, Order of Merit of the Ministry of Communications, Second Class badge, in silver-gilt and enamels, width 
4omm, with original riband, extremely fine £400-600 
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*China, Xu Shi Chang Inauguration, October 1918, commemorative medal, in silver-gilt and enamels, with central pho- 
tographic-style portrait of Xu Shi Chang, width 40mm, with original riband, good very fine £1,000-1,200 
33 


*China, Wu Pei Fu Military Academy Qualification badge, for Virtuous Behaviour, in silver-gilt and enamel, with cen- 
tral photographic style portrait of Xu Shi Chang, width 53mm, in case of issue and with original riband, good very fine 
£600-800 


34 

*China, Marshal Wang Cheng Bin, Commander of 23™¢ Division National Army, Merit Medal, circa 1922-24, in 
silver-gilt and enamels, with central photographic style portrait of Wang Cheng Bing, width 58mm, with original riband, good 
very fine £1,000-1,500 

















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50 
*China, Nanking Government, Order of the Brilliant Jade, Third Grade Grand Cordon set of insignia, comprising sash 


badge and breast star, in silver-gilt and enamels with central red carved jade stone, both with archaic Chinese characters in 
cartouche on reverse and serial number 143 stamped below, in black lacquered wooden case of issue with six Chinese char- 
acters on lid (Ta Shou Tsai Yu Hsun Chang), extremely fine, with sash and related lapel fitting, rare £4,000-6,000 


36 
Congo-Brazzaville, Order of Congolese Merit, Knight’s breast badge, in silver-gilt and enamels, width 50.7mm; 
A.N.O.F.O.M. Marseilles, French Overseas Order of Merit, in silver-gilt and enamel, width 52mm, this with 


Democratic Republic of Congo riband, extremely fine (2) £200-250 
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*Comoro Islands, Order of the Star of Comoro, type 1 (pre 1896), Knight’s breast badge, in silver-gilt, width of star 
35.5mm, extremely fine and rare £400-500 
38 


*Croatia, Independent State (1941-45), Order of Merit, Christian issue, First Class set of insignia, by Braca Knaux, 
Zagreb, comprising neck badge, in silver and red enamel, width 44mm, and breast star, in silver, with red enamelled centre, 
70mm, in case of issue, extremely fine (2) £2,000-3,000 


39 

*Denmark, Order of the Dannebrog, Commander’s breast star, mid-19" century, by Michelson, in in jewel-cut silver with 
applied gold lettering and gold and red enamel decoration, with sprung forked brooch-pin and keeper, 70 x 54mm, extremely 
fine £500-700 


40 
*Denmark, Order of the Dannebrog, a privately-made Knight’s breast badge in gold and enamels, Christian IX issue 
(1863-1906), flat crown attached to badge by two rivets, 57 x 28.5mm, “I” of “IX” broken so that the monogram appears at 


first sight to be that of Christian X, otherwise good very fine £300-400 
41 
*Egypt, Order of al-Kemal, United Arab Republic issue (1958-71), Second Class badge, in silver-gilt and enamels, with 
alternate sapphires and garnets at points and garnets in angles, 45mm, with bow for wearing, extremely fine £600-700 
42 


*France, Proposed Napoleonic Order of the Three Golden Fleeces, a 20" century collector’s copy of the sash badge 
based on contemporary drawings for the proposed Order, in gilt medal, with enamelled firestone suspension, 127 x 55mm, 


extremely fine £600-800 
43 

*France, Replica of Field Marshal Ney’s Baton, 1804 issue, hallmarked London 1980, in silver gilt and blue velvet with 
gold embroidered eagles, extremely fine £1,000-1,500 
44 

France, Ordre de la Santé Publique, Commander’s neck badge, in silver-gilt and blue enamel, width 55mm, enamel 
chipped in places, very fine £120-150 
45 

*Germany, Prussia, Pour le Mérite, collector’s copy of the Grand Cross breast star, in silver-gilt, with gilt and enamelled 
centre, 87mm, extremely fine £400-600 


Purchased from Forman of Piccadilly, circa 1980. 


46 
*Germany, Prussia, Pour le Mérite, original case, Great War period, with removable velvet insert for the badge, and silk 
upper lining, hinge slightly strained, very fine and rare £1,500-2,000 
47 


*Germany, Prussia, Pour le Mérite, original card forwarding box, Great War period, with purple label inscribed ORDEN 
POUR LE MERITE NUR VON DEM BELIEHENEN ZU OFFNEN, and with Kgl. Preuss Gemorden seal, a few minor paper tears, very fine 
and of the highest rarity £1,500-2,000 


48 

*Germany, Prussia, Order of the Crown type 2 (1867-1918), First Class set of insignia, comprising sash badge, w 
engraved on lower limb of Cross, 62mm, and breast star, w engraved below keeper, 91mm, in case of issue, virtually as issued, 
with sash (2) £3,000-4,000 

















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49 
*Greece, Order of the Redeemer type 2, Grand Cross set of insignia, by Lemaitre, Paris, comprising sash badge, in gold 


and enamels, width 55mm, and breast star, in jewel cut silver, with gilt and enamelled centre, 91mm, in case of issue, extreme- 
ly fine, with sash (2) £3,000-4,000 


50 

*Greece, Order of the Redeemer type 2, Second Class set of insignia, comprising neck badge, in silver-gilt and enamels, 
with gold and enamelled centre, width 45.5mm, and breast star, in silver, with gilt and enamelled centre, 74mm, extremely 
fine (2) £800-1,000 


51 

Greece, Order of the Redeemer type 2, Knight’s breast badge, in silver, gilt and enamels, in Pomonis case of issue, 
extremely fine; Greco-Bulgarian War medal 1912-13, 2 clasps, Kilikis-Lachana, Kresna-Tsoumagia, with additional wound 
clasp, good very fine; Medal for Outstanding Acts 1940, in box of issue, with related miniature and with an additional box of 


issue; War Commemorative 1941-45, extremely fine (6) £150-180 
52 
*Greece Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem, Order of the Orthodox Crusaders, sash badge, in silver-gilt and 
enamels, width 99mm, extremely fine, with sash £1,500-2,000 
53 


*Greece Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem, Order of the Orthodox Crusaders, neck badge, in silver-gilt and 
enamels, with lower screw pin which, when removed, allows the badge to open to reveal a relic compartment, width 57.5 mm, 


about extremely fine £800-1,000 

54 

*India, Bikaner, Maharajah Ganga Singh Golden Jubilee 1937, in silver, with original ribbon, good very fine 
£150-200 

55 


Italy, Order of the Crown, Second Class breast star, by Cravanzola, successors to Borani, Rome, 1880-1900, in silver, with gold 
and enamelled centre, 76mm, in case of issue, with crowned U on lid, extremely fine; Commander’s neck badge, by Rothe, Vienna, 
suspension ring hallmarked, in silver-gilt and enamels, 51mm, in case of issue, right limb chipped, very fine; Order of Malta, case 
of issue for a Commander’s neck badge, by Gardino of Rome, very fine; Italian commemorative bronze medals (2), Patriotic 
Congress, Paris, 1856, by P. Thermignon, 55mm; Agricultural Merit Medal, by Speranza, Umberto I issue, very fine or better (5) 


£300-350 
All awarded to members of the Curtopassi Family; see Morton and Eden, 29 November 2012, lots 187-197. 
56 
Italy, Royal House Memorial Medal, by Regia Zecca, in bronze, 31.5mm, in case of issue, extremely fine £100-150 
57 
*Katanga, Order of National Merit, Commander’s neck badge, by A. Chobillon, Paris, in gilt and enamels, width 47mm, 
in case of issue, centre chipped, otherwise good very fine £400-600 
Katanga, in the Congo, existed for as an independent state for two and a half years between July 1960 and January 1963. 
58 
*Katanga, Order of National Merit, bronze merit medal, 31.6mm, extremely fine £200-300 
59 
*Lithuania, Military Badge, Vytautas within rhombus, 1919 11-25 engraved on plate below, with brass screw back fitting, 
very fine £600-800 
60 
*Mauritania, Order of National Merit, Commander’s neck badge, by Artus Bertrand, Paris, in silver-gilt and green enam- 
el, width 43mm, in case of issue, with related lapel fitting, extremely fine £200-300 
61 


*Mexico, Order of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Military Division, Commander’s neck badge, in gold and enamels, probably 
French made, reverse legend AL PATRIOTISMO HEROICO, 79.5mm (including eagle suspension) x 49.5mm, centre and upper right 
limb slightly chipped, good very fine and of excellent quality £3,000-4,000 


62 
*New Caledonia, Medal for Courage and Dedication, Fifth Class, in bronze, by Roty, 27.5mm, extremely fine and very 
rare £300-400 











63 

*Norway, Order of St. Olav, Military Division, Grand Cross set of insignia, by Tostrup, Oslo, comprising sash badge, in 
gold and enamels, width 61.5mm and breast star, in silver, with gold and enamelled centre, 79mm, in case of issue, extreme- 
ly fine, with sash (2) £3,500-4,500 


64 
*Oman, Order of Oman, Special Class set of 
insignia bestowed on Colonel Sir Hugh Richard 
Deare Oldman K.C.B., M.C., Military Secretary 
and Commander of the Army in Muscat and 
Later Omani Defence Secretary, by Asprey’s, with 
London date mark for 1971, comprising collar, in 18 
carat white gold, with 26 links of alternate rings and 
lozenge centred quatrefoils, 303g, collar badge, in 
white gold and enamels, central inner circle set with 
diamonds and points of badge set with pearls, width 91 
mm, 128g, sash badge, in white gold and enamels, 
width 58.6mm, 51.6g and breast star, in white gold and 
enamels, central inner and outer circles and borders of 
rays set with diamonds, points set with pearls, width 
93.5mm, 135g, suspension loop of sash badge bent due to straining, otherwise extremely fine and extremely rare (lot) 
£15,000-20,000 





Offered with a framed and glazed photograph of Sir Hugh and Lady Oldman in conversation with Sultan Qaboos in 1981 (see detail, reduced). 
For Sir Hugh Oldman’s British awards and medals, see lot 352. 





65 

*Poland, Republic (1918-39), Order of the White Eagle, Grand Cross set of insignia, by Wiktor Gontarczyk, Warsaw, 
breast star with maker’s mark and hallmarked, comprising sash badge in silver-gilt and enamels, width 69mm, and breast star, 
in silver, with gilt and enamelled centre, 79.5mm, suspension loop of badge bent due to straining, star chipped in places, good 
very fine and rare (2) £6,000-8,000 


66 

Poland, Monte Cassino Group of Four, awarded to Private Abram Goldman, 7 Lwowski Battalion, Strzelco’ 4, 
2d Polish Corps, Cross of Valour 1920, Monte Cassino Cross (187030), Army Medal, 5° Kresowa Infantry Division badge, 
by Lorioli, with miniature, 1939-45 and Italy Stars, good very fine (6) £300-500 


The lot is offered with the following original documentation, Identity cards for Monte Cassino Cross, Army Medal, 5" Kresowa Infantry 
Division badge, 2™ Polish Corps, Service Certificate, Soldier Service and Pay Book, Polish Resettlement Corps form, Alien Identity Certificate, 
18 original photographs relating to his service; together with a 19" century European vellum Torah scroll, Jewish devotional book by Druck, 
Sikora i Mylner, Warsaw (this in distressed condition), and a 1989 long playing record of songs of the Jewish Partisans of Vilna. 


67 
*Portugal, Order of Christ, Grand Cross breast star, early 19th century, in silver, with gold and enamelled centre and 
Sacred Heart, 85 x 68.5mm, alternate rays pierced for suspension, about extremely fine £700-1,000 


68 
*Portugal, Order of Christ, Knight’s breast badge, late 19th century, in silver-gilt and blue and white enamels, with gold 


and enamelled centre, 61mm (including suspension) x 39mm, suspension ring with import mark, extremely fine £180-220 


69 
*Portugal, Order of the Tower and the Sword, Knight’s breast badge, late 19th century in silver and enamel, with gold 
and enamelled centre, 50.5 x 40.5mm, reverse chipped, very fine £150-200 


70 
*Portugal, Order of St. James of the Sword, Grand Cross breast star, early 19th century, in silver, with gilt and enam- 
elled centre and Sacred Heart, 85 x 77mm, alternate rays pierced for suspension, about extremely fine £600-800 





71 
*Portugal, Order of St Isabella, sash badge, in gold and enamels, 95.5mm (including suspension) x 50mm, extremely fine 
£5,000-7,000 


72 
*Portugal, Order of Merit, Grand Cross Sash badge, in silver-gilt and enamels, width 51mm, extremely fine with old sash 
£250-300 


73 
*Romania, Faithful Service Order (1932-47), Knight’s breast badge, in silver and blue enamel, width, 38mm, extremely 


fine and rare £1,000-1,200 





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74 
*Russia, Order of the White Eagle, set of insignia, by Julius Keibel, St Petersburg, dated 1866; comprising sash badge, in 


gold and enamels, fully marked on eagle’s claws and on carrier, 90 x 62mm, breast star, in silver-gilt and enamels, marked on 
backplate and brooch-pin, 87.5mm and complete sash with fittings, badge with typical losses to blue enamel on ribbons and 
also to red enamel of crown suspension, otherwise good very fine or extremely fine; in original red fitted case of issue with 
gilt lettering and decoration on lid, velvet-lined insert and embossed gilt retaining panel for the sash compartment, case in 


good very fine condition (lot) £40,000-50,000 
75 
*Russia, Order of St Vladimir, Civil Division, breast star in silver, silver-gilt and enamels, circa 1905-10, by Eduard, St 
Petersburg, marked VJI on backplate, 88mm, minor enamel flaws, good very fine £7,000-9,000 
76 


*Russia, Order of St Anne, Military Division, First Class sash badge in gold and enamels, by Eduard, St Petersburg, 1908- 
17, signed BJ beneath enamel of upper arm of obverse but otherwise without a maker’s mark, width 52mm, extremely fine 
£15,000-18,000 


77 

*Russia, Order of St Anne, Civil Division, a European-made group of insignia, comprising sash badge in bronze-gilt and 

enamels, with finely-detailed large central portrait medallion of the Saint, width 51.5mm, and breast star, in silver, silver-gilt 

and red enamel, by C.F. Rothe, Vienna, 83.5mm, good very fine; together with a 600mm length of watered silk sash (lot) 
£2,000-3,000 


78 

*Russia, Order of St Anne, Military Division, Second Class badge in gold and enamels, by Eduard, marked BJ], 43.5mm, 
some wear and marks to enamel, very fine or better; in an official contemporary red Orders case with gold-blocked Imperial 
Eagle on the lid, small repair to lid above fastener £3,000-4,000 


79 
*Russia, Order of St Anne, Civil Division, Second Class neck badge in gold and enamels, by Julius Keibel, St Petersburg, 


signed IK and with Imperial Warrant mark beneath enamel of reverse, width 43.5mm, very light wear and tiny chip to the 
reverse medallion, about extremely fine, with original neck riband £2,000-3,000 


Offered in an unofficial fitted case which contains a manuscript note apparently attributing the award to a Scandinavian recipient in 1888. 


80 

*Russia, Order of St Anne, Civil division, Second Class badge in gold and enamels, circa 1905-10, by Eduard, St 
Petersburg, marked WJI beneath enamel, 44mm, a few marks and some repair to enamel, very fine, in “St Anne 2"¢ Class” 
paper-covered fitted case £1,500-2,000 


81 

*Russia, Order of St Anne, Military Division, Third Class badge in gold and enamels, by Eduard, marked BJ], 35.5mm; 
Order of St Stanislaus, Civil Division, Third Class badge in gold and enamels, also by Eduard, 40mm, reverse rather 
scratched or tooled, 39mm; Insignia of Distinction of the Military Order of St George, a good quality privately-made 
Cross in silver, unmarked and unnumbered, with applied raised centres on both sides, 38mm; with Great Britain, 1914-15 
Star, renamed in engraved capitals (2180 Pte. J.L. Ramage, The Buffs.) British War and Victory Medals, renamed in 
rather irregular impressed capitals (2180 Pte. J.L. Ramage The Buffs), generally very fine (6) £1,000-1,200 


Offered with two relating brooch-mounted riband bars and a WW2 group photograph including Ramage as a Captain in the Home Guard. 


82 

*Russia, Order of St Stanislaus, Military Division, an assembled First Class set of insignia, comprising: a privately-made 
double-sided sash badge in gold and enamels, with St Petersburg mark and traces of date mark 18—on suspension ring, fitted 
with later gold swords, 55.5 X 53.5mm, worn overall and with some repair to enamel, good fine to very fine; and breast star, 
by Eduard, before 1908, in silver, silver-gilt and enamels, with plain (not gilt) reverse (originally a Civil star with silver-gilt 
swords which have been fixed to the raised central boss only, thereby avoiding damage to the star’s rays), 90mm, reverse fit- 
ted with steel screwpost, silver screwplate and spinner in addition to conventional vertical brooch-pin, extremely fine, the 


set offered with old sash (lot) £10,000-12,000 
83 
*Russia, Bukharan Loyal Service Medal, in silver, with traces of enamel, 44mm, very fine £100-150 
84 


*Russia, Bukharan Loyal Service Medal, in silver, drop-shaped, with traces of enamel , 57.5 x 47mm, very fine £200-300 








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85 
*Russia, Miniature: Order of St Vladimir, an early miniature badge in gold and enamels, with raised ‘bulbous’ centres, 
plain ring suspension, width 15mm, very fine £300-400 


86 
*Various Miniatures: A double-stranded gold chain with two stickpins for wearing mounted with miniature badges of the 
Russian Order of St Anne (Civil), Prussian Order of the Crown and Swedish Order of the Sword, each 13mm 


approx., with suspension links for three further miniatures, good very fine (lot) £250-300 
87 

*Russia, Battle of Leipzig, 1813, oval silver medal by Loos, struck in Berlin, with four shields of Austria/Hungary, Russia, 
Prussia and Sweden, 36.5mm (including suspension ring) x 26mm (Diakov 370), very fine and toned £400-500 
88 

*Russia, Silver Zeal Medal, Nicholas II issue, officially impressed (B. 4389. J. Foley, Sean. R.N.R. H.M.S. Jupiter), 
extremely fine £300-400 


H.M.S. Jupiter set sail in February 1915 in order to assist in ice-breaking duties in the White Sea passage towards Archangel. S.S. Thracea, a 
cargo ship laden with munitions and supplies, became trapped in the ice off Archangel and Jupiter was dispatched to tow her into port. At 
one stage the tow-rope broke apart and 16 men volunteered to man the long boat to retrieve the two ends of the rope and splice them togeth- 
er, thus ensuring the Thracea reached Archangel safely. 


89 

Russia, various Imperial Medals (5), comprising a privately-struck Alexander III Memorial medal in silver, by ChO, 
28mm, extremely fine, Nicholas II For Bravery medals in silver (2), 3™ Class, no.209232 and 4" Class, no. 341050, very fine 
and about very fine, bronze medal for Pacification of Polish Rebellion, 1863-64, fine and bronze medal for Patriotic War 
Centenary 1812-1912, extremely fine (5) £400-500 





90 

*Russia, a Commemorative Jeton for the Fiftieth Anniversary of T.R.A.R.M. / Krasnyi Treugol’nik Works, 
1860-1910, in gold and enamels, by AT (marked in oval frame on suspension ring), of multi-part construction, with central 
triangle supporting Roman numeral L on a circular base with Imperial eagle suspension having an integral shaped ribbon car- 
rier, width 27.8mm, good very fine £2,500-3,000 


The Krasnyi Treugol’nik Works were established in St. Petersburg in 1860 as the T.R.A.R.M. (Russian-American partnership for rubber man- 
ufacture), a major medal-winning producer of rubber goods for the international market as well as within Russia itself. 


Q1 

*Russia, Railway Engineers’ Institute, Graduate’s badge, in plain silver, by ®.I., St Petersburg, before 1896, screwback 
suspension with separate backplate, both similarly marked ®.IF. and the backplate scratch-engraved with recipient’s name and 
the date “1894” (P. & B. vol. 1, 1.1.12), very fine £250-300 


92 

*Russia, a Candidate’s Badge for a Lay Theologian, in silver (with traces of gilding in places) and pale blue and white 
enamel, by EILI, St Petersburg, circa 1901, screwback suspension with separate backplate, both similarly marked EIILI (P. & B. 
vol.1, 2.48.) good very fine £400-500 








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93 
*Russia, Imperial Lyceum, Moscow, Graduate’s badge, in silver and enamels, by Y.II, Moscow, circa 1910 (P. & B. vol. 1, 


2.31), screwpost and other traces of mounting removed so that the badge is now without suspension, some repair to white 


enamel, about very fine £300-400 
94 

*Russia, 50" Anniversary of the Submission of the Caucasus 1909, badge in copper, bronze-gilt and black enamel, 
with applied cyphers of Alexander II and Nicholas II (P. & B. vol. 2, 10.4), good very fine £400-500 
94A 

Russia, Orthodox Order of St. Nestor the Chronicler, Third Class badge, in silvered metal and enamels, width 53mm, 
in green velvet case of issue, extremely fine £80-120 
95 


*Russia, Copies: Order of St. George, copy First Class set of insignia, comprising sash badge, in silver-gilt and enamels, 
54mm, and breast star (by Rothe) with later AK mark on retaining pin, in silver-gilt and black enamel, 85mm, extremely fine, 
with modern sash, offered as copies (lot) £700-1,000 


Ex Robert Werlich collection. 


96 

Russia, Copies of Imperial campaign medals (13), comprising: Patriotic War Medal 1812, ‘silver’; Caucasus Campaign 

1837; ‘silver’, Alexander II, Large Zeal, bronze; Conquest of Chechnya and Dagestan 1859, ‘silver’; Khiva Campaign 1873, ‘sil- 

ver’; Pacification of Kokand 1875-6, bronze; First Census 1897 ‘silver’; China Campaign 1900-01 but dated 1904-05, ‘silver’; 

50" Anniversary of Sebastopol 1905, ‘silver’; Rozhestvensky’s Far East Expedition 1905 ‘silver’; Naval Rebuilding 1905-10 (2), 

in ‘silver’ and bronze; Third Anniversary of the October Revolution in ‘silver’, generally very fine, all offered as copies (13) 
£200-300 


97 
*Imperial Russia, Portrait Miniature: A 19 Century glazed leather-framed portrait miniature of a Guards Officer wear- 
ing spectacles, a sash, and a badge of the Order of St Vladimir pinned beside his collar, 35mm, leather frame damaged, por- 


trait in good very fine condition, apparently unsigned but of good style £300-500 
98 
*Imperial Russia, Sword Knot: Order of St George, a braided knot or tassel in wire and St George colours, on riband 
loop, good very finel £1,500-2,000 
99 


*Imperial Russia, Helmet Plate: A Regimental helmet plate in the form of a star of the Order of St Andrew, in embossed 
silver and enamels, marked with kokoshnik at one ray-tip, with two screwposts for attachment to helmet, 87mm, good very 
fine £1,000-1,500 


Ex 101 


both illustrated half actual size 


100 
*Imperial Russia, Shoulder Boards: A Pair of Major-General’s shoulder boards, in woven gold braid with silver stars on 


red felt base, with gilt Imperial Eagle buttons, very fine (2) £800-1,200 


101 
*Imperial Russia, Epaulettes: A Pair of Imperial Epaulettes and twelve uniform buttons, Crimea War period, attributed 


to Captain Oskar Friedrich Haake, 5th Division, very fine (14) £600-800 








102 

*Russia, Red Army, Hero of the Capture of Tiflis, an oval Award Badge dated 1921, in silver and enamels, unmarked, 

of good quality multi-part construction having an applied red-enamelled silver star with hammer-and-plough device in gold at 

its centre, backplate showing four rivets and central screwpost, engraved To M. Velikanov FROM R.V.C. [Revolutionary 

Military Council] of the XI Army, 49.8 x 32.1mm, good very fine and toned, with original screwplate, extremely rare 
£25,000-35,000 


MIKHAIL DMITRIEVICH VELIKANOV (1892-1938) was a Soviet Military Commander from 
Nikolskoye (present-day Ryazan Oblast). Having fought in World War I he joined the Red Army 
in February, 1918. After distinguishing himself in the Battle of Simbirsk (October 1918) and as 
a commander of the ist Brigade of the ‘Iron Division’, he joined the 20" Rifle Division 
(February—March 1919) and then the UFA Army Group (March—April 1919), which took part in 
the defeat of Aleksandr Kolchak’s White Forces in the Urals. Velikanov then led the Defence of 
Orenburg from April to June 1919, and commanded shock Infantry troops within the 1st 
Cavalry Army in February, 1920. He crushed the Azeri uprising in Ganja (May 1920), and took 
part in the campaigns in Armenia (December 1920) and Georgia (February—March 1921). 


He became a Bolshevik party member in 1924 and Deputy Commander of the North Caucasus 
- Military District from 1930 to 1933. Later he commanded troops firstly in the Central Asian 
©) Military District (December 1933-June 1937), being appointed Comandarm of the Second Rank 
in 1935, and secondly in the Transbaikal Military District (June—November 1937). He was then 
sacked, arrested a month later, and executed in 1938, although his name was to be posthumous- 
ly rehabilitated in 1956. 





See also enlarged illustration on back cover. 





103 

*Russia, Order of the Red Banner of Labour of the Soviet Republic of Georgia, first type, unnumbered, in silver 
with red and white enamel and applied hammer-and-sickle in gold, of multi-part wired construction, screwpost suspension 
(lacking original screwplate), light overall wear, very fine to good very fine and extremely rare £15,000-20,000 


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104 

*Soviet Union, Hero of the Soviet Union’s Gold Star Medal, no. 1947, very fine, with relating large Award Document 
(in cased folder) and miniature Award Document (in identification book), both documents issued on 13 June 1967 for the 
award dated 22 February 1944 to Yevgeny Andreevich Cyplenkov; and a presentation gold wrist watch by Kirovskie, 
1960s, the backplate with engraved inscription, with leather strap, in working order, very fine (lot) £5,000-7,000 


YEVGENY ANDREEVICH CYPLENKOV was born in Petrograd in 1920 and joined the Army in 1938. He graduated from the Dnepropetrovsk Military 
Engineering Academy in 1941, becoming a Platoon Commander in the 68" Engineers’ Battalion of the 46 Army. He received his award of 
Hero of the Soviet Union in recognition of an action on the River Dniepr on 26 September 1943 and was also awarded the Order of Lenin, 
Order of the Patriotic War (First Class) and the Order of the Red Star. He was demobilised in 1948 and lived in Leningrad; his documents are 
evidently official replacements for lost or damaged originals. 


105 
*Soviet Union, Order of Lenin, type 5, variation 1 no. 109831, in red card case, extremely fine, with relating Order Book 
in the name of Leonti Nikolaevich Gobechi dated 8 February 1950 £700-900 
106 


Soviet Union, Order of the October Revolution, no. 95013 (McDaniel variation 2) and Order of the Red Banner (2 
badges), nos. 307400 (McDaniel type 3, variation 3) and 507528 (McDaniel type 4) good very fine to extremely fine (3) 


£450-550 


107 

*Soviet Union, Order of the Red Banner, ‘mirror reverse’ type no. 1213, apparently once fitted with later (5-sided type) 
ring suspension but has since been carefully re-converted to screwback suspension, with conventional 32.5mm screwplate as 
used for various Orders (cf McDaniel type 1, variation 2), faint traces of repair, very fine to good very fine  £3,500-4,500 





108 
*Soviet Union, Order of Kutuzov, Second Class, no. 2713, type 2 variation 2, with screwback suspension, awarded to Petr 
Filippovich Shvetsov, light overall wear, good very fine and lightly toned £5,000-7,000 


Offered with original relating 1938/39 Order Book, with photograph, recording the award together with three Orders of the Red Banner (nos. 
4847, 118584 and 6391) and two Orders of Lenin (nos. 8050 and 46514), the back endpaper bearing a manuscript record, with official stamp, 
of the award of the first Lenin on 16 March 1942. The lot also includes McDaniel Authentication Certificates dated Nov 2000 in respect of 
the Order (“9 out of a possible 10”) and the Order Book, which is in good very fine condition. 


109 
*Soviet Union, Order of the Badge of Honour, no. 27965, with screwback suspension (McDaniel type 2, variation 5), in 
fitted, velvet lined red case, good very fine £200-250 
110 


Soviet Union, A Propaganda Plaque, circa 1950, with embossed high relief portrait of Stalin in gilt-bronze on a white 
enamel ground, wreath ornaments around, 123mm, from the official Mint issue, with original eye for wall display, extreme- 
ly fine £200-300 


111 

*Soviet Union, A Pair of Collar Corner Tabs from a Uniform for a Marshal of the Soviet Union, in gold braid, wire, 
thread and sequins on a red ground, each width 78mm; together with a pair of Sleeve Badges probably from the same uniform, 
with gold braid hammer-and-sickle ornaments on Red Star ground, each 52mm, some overall wear, very fine (4) £1,000-1,500 


112 
Soviet Union, Copy: Order of Kutuzov, Second Class, copy of first type, numbered 334, in red card Order box, extremely 
fine, offered as a copy £400-500 








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*Serbia, Order of the Cross of Takovo, with central Milan IV monogram, Grand Cross set of insignia, by Rothe, Vienna, 
comprising sash badge, in silver-gilt and enamels, width 42mm, and breast star, in jewel-cut silver, with gilt and enamelled 


centre, 93.5 x 87mm, in Popovich Brothers case, extremely fine, with sash (2) £4,000-6,000 
114 

*South Kasai, Order of N’konga, Officer’s breast badge, in gilt and white enamel with upper brilliant, width 40mm, two 
limbs of Cross chipped, very fine and rare £300-400 


South Kasai, in the Congo, existed as an independent state for 16 months between August 1960 and December 1961. 


115 
*Spain, Order of Isabella the Catholic, Grand Cross sash badge, in silver-gilt and enamels, with gold and enamelled cen- 
tre, 62.5mm, about extremely fine, with old sash £300-400 
116 


Spain, Miscellaneous Orders and Decorations, Five: Order of Social Penitentiary Merit, breast badge in silver-gilt and 
enamels; Order of Alfonso the Wise, circular breast badge, in silver-gilt and enamels; Order of St. Raimundo of Penafort, sin- 
gle Cross, in silver-gilt and enamels; Silver Postal Merit Medal (1916); Royal Order for Civil Recognition of the Victims of 
Terrorism, Commander’s neck badge, in gilt and enamels; together with Croatia, Medal of the Homeland 19092, first with 


loose back plate, generally good very fine or better (6) £300-350 

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Spain, Army Merit Medal, 1970 issue; together with Naval and Air Force Medals, both 1970 issue, all extremely fine (3) 
£150-200 





118 
*Sweden, Silver Bravery Medal of the Order of the Sword, early 19" century, 32mm, pierced for suspension, about 
extremely fine £600-800 
119 


Sweden, Order of St. Bridget, neck badge, in silver-gilt and enamels, with trophy of arms suspension, extremely fine; 
Order of Armanath, breast badge in gilt metal; 90" Birthday of Gustav V 1948, commemorative badge, in case of issue; 
Reserve Long Service Medal, Gustav V, in silver; Queen Sofia’s Red Cross badge, in silver-gilt and enamels, good very 
fine or better (5) £220-250 


120 

Sweden, Pro Patria Medal for Faithful Service, Gustav V, large silver (edge engraved Johann August Jansson 
1911); with Swedish Patriotic Society, Long Service Medals (3), Large Silver, Gustav V (Carl Malmquist), Small 
Silver (2), Oscar II, unnamed, Gustav V (Karl Hellgren), last cased but with incorrect Pro Patria riband, good very fine or 
better (4) £180-220 


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121 

*U.S.A., City of Philadelphia’s Testimonial Bronze Medal, 1854, reverse legend TESTIMONIAL TO CAPTAINS CRIGHTON, 
LOW AND STOUFFER OF THE SHIPS THREE BELLS, KILBY, AND ANTARCTIC... ...FOR THEIR GALLANTRY IN RESCUING THE PASSENGERS FROM THE 
WRECK OF THE STEAMER SAN FRANCISCO JANUARY 1854., 75mm, light handling marks, extremely fine £250-300 


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122 

*U.S.A., State of Virginia’s Herndon Testimonial Medal, 1858, in white metal, obv., a depiction in high relief of a 
lifeboat leaving the foundering S.S. Central America, legend around, signed by F.B. Smith & Hartmann, New York, rev., PRE- 
SENTED TO THE WIDOW OF CAPTAIN WILLIAM LEWIS HERNDON, U.S. NAVY BY VIRGINIA AS A TESTIMONIAL OF RESPECT FOR HER VIRTUOUS 
SON A NOBLE AND GALLANT OFFICER 1858, 57mm, minimal wear to the very highest points of the design on obverse, good 
extremely fine and rare £2,000-3,000 


WILLIAM LEWIS HERNDON was an outstanding and highly experienced seaman as well as a celebrated explorer. During the well-known three- 
day hurricane off North Carolina in September 1857 in which the Central America struggled with loss of power, Herndon successfully organ- 
ised the evacuation of 152 women and children to another vessel. Nevertheless the devastating storm claimed the lives of over 400 passen- 
gers and crew the ship and her valuable cargo sank near Cape Hatteras on 12" September; Herndon went down with his ship. 


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123 

*U.S.A., Humane Society of Massachusetts, Reward of Merit, Courage and Perseverance, in silver, by Benjamin 
Wyon, London, reverse engraved Patrick H. Riley FOR GALLANT AND SUCCESSFUL EFFORT IN RESCUING FROM DROWNING / 
CHARLES BLAKE / APRIL 30 1883, 57mm, extremely fine, well toned £250-300 


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124 

*U.S.A., The Order of Sons of St George, an engraved gold presentation medal with applied gold wreath, ropework 
mount and brooch suspension, engraved on suspension and on obverse Presented to Robert Halfyard A.B. H.M.S. “BLAKE”. 
/ by the Order Sons of St George in recognition of an act of heroism on his part whereby Human lives were saved from 
drowning / New York Harbor April 30 1893 and on reverse Presented by Supreme President W.N. BARTRAM and 
Committee of Twelve representing New York Lodges O.S. St G on board H.M.S. “Blake” / New York Harbor. 7" May 1893., 
37mm, virtually as made £3200-400 


‘On the 30th April, 1893, an accident occurred in New York Harbour which would have probably have resulted in the death of a boy of four- 
teen had it not been for the bravery of the seaman Robert Halfyard. H.M.S. Blake was moored in the harbour when a boat capsized along- 
side the ship, and its occupants were thrown into the water. There was a strong tide running, between four and five knots, and there were 
numerous small steamers, all moving ahead in order to keep abreast of the Blake. The seaman Halfyard seeing the boy drowning, at once 
jumped overboard from the skid deck, a height of some thirty feet, swam to the lad and held him up for a time; but some other person, who 
had also been an occupant of the capsized boat, caught the man by the leg and pulled him under the surface, causing Halfyard to let go his 
hold of the boy; he, however, again swam to the boy’s assistance, dived and succeeded in saving him. There was considerable danger incurred 
by the salvor from the paddle-wheels of the numerous tugs moving around the ship in a tideway.’ 


ROBERT HALFYARD was born in Plymouth on 21 February 1866 and enlisted for the Royal Navy as a Boy 2nd Class on 12 November 1881, based 
at Impregnable; became Ordinary Seaman in February 1884 whilst on the Northumberland and Able Seaman in May 1887 when on the 
Swallow. He served on the Blake, February 1892 - August 1894, during which time he performed the above daring rescue but also finding 
himself several times in the cells, ending his service on the Blake with 15 months hard labour. Despite this, on the Calypso in 1897 he was 
advanced to Leading Seaman and to Petty Officer 2nd Class in October the same year. Halfyard served on the Doris, December 1899 - October 
1900 and then on Monarch until the end of 1902, receiving the Q.S.A. without clasp. Petty Officer Halfyard transferred to the Royal Fleet 
Reserve in May 1906 and was recalled for war service on 2 August 1914. As a Petty Officer ist Class he served on Amphitrite, August 1914 - 
June 1915 and Vivid IJ, June 1915 - March 1916. Then based on the depot ship Sabrina, he then served on the collier ‘Q-Ship’ Vala (Q.8), March 
1916 - August 1916. Further service followed on the Vivid I Vivid III and Halfyard was demobilised on 27 February 1919. 


Halfyard also received the Royal Humane Society’s small silver (successful) medal for the 1893 rescue (this sold by Dix, Noonan & Webb, 13 
December 2007, lot 550). 


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125 
*U.S.A., Treasury Silver Life Saving Medal, awarded in 1888, engraved within wreath on reverse To Mary Whitely 


for bravely aiding to save three men from drowning August 21° 1888, with wreathed eagle’s head suspension 


(marked TIFFANY & CO. on reverse, 44.5mm, with original silver suspension brooch and fragment of original ribbon, very fine 
£1,800-2,200 


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126 
*U.S.A., Citizens of Philadelphia Medal for the Rescue of the Passengers and Crew of Steamship Danmark in 


Mid Ocean, April 1889, in silver, edge engraved in italic capitals Alexander Macdonald. Able Seaman, with swivel 
mount and elaborate brooch suspension representing ropes, pulleys and a lifebelt with S.s. MISSOURI enamelled in blue, 


48.5mm, good very fine £350-450 








127 

*U.S.A., Citizens of Philadelphia Medal for the Rescue of the Passengers and Crew of Steamship Danmark in 
Mid Ocean, April 1889, specimen medals (2), both of prooflike quality, without suspension, 48.5mm, one in copper, virtu- 
ally as struck and the other in white metal, old rim bruise, otherwise also virtually as struck (2) £200-300 


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128 


*U.S.A., Presidential Gold Life Saving Medal, engraved To T. ARNOLD, SEAMAN, of the British Steamship 
AGAPENOR, in recognition of his heroic services in effecting the rescue at sea, on January 23, 1921, of the 
Master and crew of the American Barkentine Carioca, brooch suspension lightly scratch-marked on reverse, light 
traces of wear overall, extremely fine £1,800-2,200 


At 4.45pm on Jan. 23 1921 the Agapenor sighted the Carioca in a hopeless state, with seven feet of water in her hold, the pumps choked and 
much of her rigging lost. She was rolling violently in a fierce sea but all hands were successfully rescued. 


The following is taken from the New York Times of 21st May 1921: 

Washington, May 20. “On behalf of President Harding and the Government of the United States, the State Department is forwarding to the 
British Foreign Office, through the American Embassy at London, for distribution, testimonials which have been awarded to master and 
second officer and certain members of the crew of the British steamer Agapenor for their heroism in rescuing the crew of the American 
barkentine Carioca of New Orleans off the coast of Crete last January. 


In recognition of the services rendered by the rescuers, a gold watch and chain ts being awarded to James W.Clark, master of the Agapenor; 
a first-grade binocular to P.Purkiss, second officer, and medals to W.Wiles, boatswain; T.Keans, lamp trimmer; R.Russell, carpenter; 
A.Watkins, J.Hayden, W.Graham, W.White, A.Lawrence and T Arnold, seamen. Each of the testimonials bears an engraved statement of 
the circumstances of the rescue”. 


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129 

*U.S.A., Treasury Gold Life Saving Medal, awarded in 1983, engraved on reverse DOUGLAS PEACE 11/10/83, with 
wreathed eagle’s head swivelling suspension, 37.5mm, with matt finish as issued, minor marks from handling, otherwise 
extremely fine; with a relating miniature as awarded, extremely fine (2) £5,000-7,000 


The Medal is offered with a copy newspaper feature and notes, including a copy of the official citation for the award dated 9 October 1984 as 
follows: 


The Secretary of Transportation takes pleasure in presenting the GOLD LIFESAVING MEDAL to DOUGLAS PEACE for acts as set forth in 
the following CITATION: 


“For extraordinary and heroic action in the early morning hours of 10 November 1983, 
when he attempted the rescue of a survivor from the capsized offshore supply vessels, M/V 
LAVERNE HERBERT, nine miles offshore from Matagorda Island, Texas. LAVERNE 
HERBERT capsized in the Gulf of Mexico during heavy seas and high winds on the evening 
of 9 November 1983. Mr. Douglas Peace was a crewmember aboard the M/V CASEY 
CHOUEST, the first vessel to arrive at the scene of the casualty. Upon the vessel’s arrival, 
a man was observed clinging from the jackstaff of the LAVERNE HERBERT. As the 
CASEY CHOUEST approached, the survivor dropped from the jackstaff and began swim- 
ming toward the rescue vessel. Suddenly the survivor ceased swimming and began to slip 
beneath the surface. Mr. Peace, with total disregard for his own safety, dove from the bow 
of the CASEY CHOUEST in a valiant attempt to rescue the man in the water, struggling 
against enormous seas and blinded by the wind and spray. As one particularly large sea 
passed Mr. Peace, he saw the survivor on the face of the next wave, unable to swim any far- 
ther, knocked beneath the surface by sea action. In a desperate and valiant move, Mr. 
Peace dove beneath the storm-tossed waves, grasped the survivor, and struggled back to 
the surface. Demonstrating great courage, he began towing the survivor toward the CASEY 
CHOUEST. Then, just as the two men were about to be pulled from the water, the CASEY 
CHOUEST was hammered by successive large beam seas. This action drove the two men 
beneath the surface and under the chine of the vessel. The survivor was literally torn from 
Mr. Peace’s grasp as the pitching and rolling vessel struck Mr. Peace violently, causing 
numerous injuries. Risking further additional injuries, Mr. Peace dove repeatedly beneath 
the surface in frustrating and unsuccessful attempts to locate the submerged victim. 
Suffering from injuries, exhaustion, and hypothermia, he was finally forced to abandon his 
efforts and was pulled aboard the CASEY CHOUEST by his shipmates. Mr. Douglas 
Peace’s heroic attempts, unselfish actions, exceptional fortitude, and utter disregard for his 
own life, despite imminent danger reflect great credit upon himself and are in keeping with 
the highest traditions of the humanitarian service”. 





Sincerely, 


J.S. GRACEY 
Admiral, U. S. Coast Guard Commandant 


Various Properties 


130 

U.S.A., Philippines Insurrection Medal 1899, No. 6878), with wrap-round suspension and original riband, very fine 
£100-150 

131 


U.S.A., a Collection of State and National Guard Medals (96), comprising Alaska (4), including General John R. Noyes 
medal; California (5), Colorado (3), District of Colombia (1), Delaware (1), Florida (3), Georgia (3), Illinois (1), Indiana (2), 
Kansas (2), Kentucky (2), Louisiana (4), Maine (1), Michigan (1), Minnesota (1), Mississippi (3), Montana (3), Nebraska (3), 
New Jersey (1), Nevada (3), New Mexico (6), New York (4), North Carolina (3), Ohio (3), Oklahoma (2), Pennsylvania (3), 
Rhode Island (4) including Spanish American War Service 1898, South Carolina (2), South Dakota (2), Texas (5), Utah (1), 
Virginia (1), Virgin Islands (2), Washington (7), Wisconsin (3), including Mexican Border Service 1916-17, Wyoming (1), very 
fine or better (96) £300-500 


132 

Miscellaneous European Orders (3), Belgium, Order of Leopold, Military Division, Knight’s breast badge, in silver, with 
gilt and enamelled centre; France, Légion d’ Honneur, Third Republic, Knight’s breast badge, in silver-gilt and enamels; 
Netherlands, Order of Orange-Nassau, Knight’s breast badge, in silver, with gilt and enamelled centre, first chipped at 
centre, very fine or better (3) £120-150 


133 

Miscellaneous World Medals (30), including Iron Cross 1914, NATO Service (2), Former Yugoslavia and ISAF, New 
Zealand War Service, Belgian and US Victory Medals; together with a quantity of miscellaneous mainly British Badges etc. 
including two Royal Artillery sweethearts brooches and an Artist’s Rifles cap badge, mixed grades (lot) £200-250 


134 

Miscellaneous World Orders, Medals and Decorations (19), comprising Belgium (4), Order of Leopold II, Knight’s 
breast badge, in silver, with enamelled centre, with Crossed swords on riband; Order of the Crown, Officer’s breast badge, in 
silver-gilt and enamels; Croix de Guerre, Leopold III issue, with bronze palm on riband; Allied Victory Medal; France (7), 
Légion d’Honneur, Third Republic, Knight’s breast badge, in silver, gilt and enamelled, cased; Médaille Militaire, Third 
Republic type 3; Colonial Medal, 1 clasp, Extreme Orient; Great War Commemorative; Overseas Operation Cross; Allied 
Victory Medal; Croix du Combattant; Germany, Third Reich (3), Iron Cross 1939, Second Class; Anschluss Medal 1938; 
Eastern Campaign 1941-42; Italy, War Commemorative 1915-18; U.S.A. (4), Distinguished Flying Cross; Air Medal; Purple 
Heart; World War II Victory, very fine and better (19) £200-250 


135 

Miscellaneous World Orders Medals and Decorations (7), comprising Belgium, Allied Victory Medal; France, 
Collectivites Locales, in silver; Portugal, Life Saving medal, Maria II type; Russia, Order of the Patriotic War, Second Class, 
type 2, No. 745039; Spain (3), Africa Campaign 1860, in nickel; Constitution of 1812 and Cadiz commemorative 1910; Victory 
1939; together with Portugal, miniature group of 4, Order of Aviz, in silver-gilt and green enamel, Order of the Red Cross, in 
silver and enamels, Exemplar Comportamento (2), in gilt and silver, mounted on silver-gilt pin-back bar, very fine and bet- 
ter (11) £150-200 


The Ivor Bush Collection of Miniature awards of Finland 


136 

Finland, Order of the Cross of Liberty, miniature badges (3), comprising 1918 issue, Second class Cross with Swords, in 
gilt and enamels; 1941 issue, Second class Cross with Swords, on Military Merit riband, in silver-gilt and enamels, reverse with 
date mark X6 (1951); 1941 or 1945 issue, Second class Cross, in silver-gilt and enamels, reverse with date mark X6 (1951), good 
very fine or better (3) £140-160 


137 

Finland, Order of the Cross of Liberty, miniature badges (6), all in gilt or silvered metal and enamels, comprising 1941 
issue, Third class Cross with Swords and Oak-Leaf on Military Merit riband; Third Class Cross with Swords on Home Front 
riband, Fourth Class Cross with Swords and Oak-Leaf, Fourth Class Cross with Swords, both on Military Merit ribands, 1945 
issue, Third and Fourth Class Crosses, very fine or better (6) £140-160 


138 

Finland, Order of the Cross of Liberty, miniature medals (9), 1918 issue, Medal of Liberty, Second class; 1939 issue, First 
Class Merit Medal of the Cross of Liberty on Rosette Riband; 1941 issue (5), Medal of Liberty, First class; Medal of Liberty, 
First class with Red Cross decoration; Medal of Liberty, First class for (military) Industry, this in silver-gilt; Medal of Liberty, 
Second class; Medal of Liberty, Second class with Red Cross decoration; 1945 issue, Medal of Merit, First class; Medal of Merit, 
Second class, generally extremely fine (9) £150-200 


139 

Finland, Order of the White Rose of Finland, miniature awards (5), type 1 (1919-36), Knight’s breast badge, in silver 
and enamels, this mounted on gilt chain with War of Liberation medal; type 2, Knight First class, in silver-gilt and enamels, 
Knight Second class, in silver and enamels; ‘Women’s’ Cross, in silver, Medal of the White Rose First class; Order of The Lion 
of Finland, Knight’s Crosses (2), both in silver-gilt and enamels, one lacking centre, very fine or better (8) £120-150 


140 

Finland, Miniature War Medals (7), War of Liberation commemoratives 1918 (2), in silver, one with rosette, the other 
with thrEJE plain silver clasps; Winter War commemorative 1939-40, in blackened iron and ten loose battle/front clasps; 
Winter War commemorative for Foreigners (3), Gold medal, in gilt metal, Silver medal, in silvered metal, Bronze medal; 
Continuation War 1941-45, good very fine or better (7) £150-200 


141 

Finland, Miniature Medals (10), relating to the Grand Duchy of Finland (2), Old Finnish Army 1881-1902, in silver-gilt, 
Veteran’s Cross, in silver; War of Liberation (4), Liberation of Helsinki, Paterimaki Cross, Capture of Tampere, Venajansaari 
commemorative; Jaeger Activist medal; Decorations of the Wars of Kindred Nations (3), Participant’s Cross, Aunus 
Commemorative, Karelia commemorative, good very fine or better, some rare (10) £150-200 


142 
Finland, Miniature Medals and Crosses for the Winter War and the War of Continuation (28), Winter War 1939- 
40 (7), Central Karelian Isthmus Cross; Lake Lagoda Coastal Defence medal; Lapland Cross; Pitkaranta Cross; Summa Battle 
Cross; Taipate Cross; Tolvajarvi Cross; War of Continuation 1941-45 (21), Headquarters Cross, with Signal and Radio 
Intelligence clasp; Home Front Cross; Air Force Cross, with Anti-Aircraft clasp; Pioneer’s Cross; Karelian Cross; Military 
Railway Units Cross; Frontier Guards Cross; Northern Viena Cross; Kannas Cross; Eastern Syvari Cross; Aunus Cross; 
Armoured Division Cross; 4" Division Cross; 10" Division Cross; 11" Division Cross; 12" Division Cross; 17 Division Cross, 
1 clasp, Hango; Eastern Karelian Isthmus Cross; Cavalry Regiments Cross; Lapland War Cross, many extremely fine (28) 
£200-250 


143 

Finland, Miniature Awards of the Finnish Physical Education and Sports Association (7), Grand Cross of Merit, 
Golden Merit Cross, both in silver-gilt and enamels, Silver Merit Cross, in silver and enamels; Silver Merit medal with Gilt 
Cross; Silver Merit Medals (2), Bronze Merit medal, generally extremely fine, first very rare (7) £120-150 


144 

Finland, Various Miniature Awards (29), Peasant’s March against Communism 1930; Civil Guard, Silver Merit Cross and 
Merit Medals (2); Blue Cross, First and Second types; Lotta Svard, Merit Cross and medal; Military Merit medal; Life Saving 
Medal; Silver and Bronze medals of the Finnish Red Cross; Civil Defence Medals (2), First and Second class; Police Silver Merit 
Cross; Pro Benignitate Humana medals (2), Frontier Guards Merit medal; Finnish Reserve Officer’s Union Golden Medal of 
Merit with Bar; Finnish Reserve Officer’s Union Silver Medal of Merit; Cadets Corps Merit Medal; Reserve N.C.O.’s 
Association, “Gold”, “Silver” and Bronze medals (2); National Defence medals (2); Defence Volunteer’s Merit medal; unofficial 
Naval medal and two uncertain miniature lapel badges, many extremely fine, some rare (29) £150-200 





145 

*Finland, Winter War Miniature Pair, Order of the Cross of Liberty, Fourth Class with Red Cross, by Tillander, in 
silver and enamels, Winter War commemorative 1939-40, 1 clasp Karelian Isthmus, with Cross swords on riband, contained 
in card Tillander box, extremely fine (2) £120-150 





146 

*Finland, War of Liberation, Winter War and War of Continuation Mounted Group of Nine, Order of the Cross 
of Liberty, by Tillander, Fourth class, with Swords and Oak Leaf, Order of the Cross of Liberty, Fourth Class with Swords, both 
in silver and enamels and on Military Merit ribands, Order of the White Rose of Finland, Knight First Class, Order of the Lion 
of Finland Knight First Class, both in silver-gilt and enamel, War of Liberation 1918, with two plain clasps, Winter War com- 
memorative 1939-40, 1 clasp, Kenttéarmia, War of Continuation 1944-45, 17" Division Cross, 1 clasp, Svir, Blue Cross, 1 clasp 
1917-18, mounted for wearing, good very fine or better (9) £200-250 


Other World Miniature Awards from the Ivor Bush Collection 


147 

Austria and Hungary, Miniature Chain of Fourteen, AustriA, Military Merit Cross, Bronze Military Merit medal with 
Swords, Karl issue, HUNGARY, Bronze Military Merit Medal 1922, Fire Cross 1941 , Second class with bar, Austri, Karl Truppen 
Cross, Wound medal, Huncary, National Defence Cross 1940, War commemorative, Long Service Decoration, Second Class, 
Transylvania commemorative 1940, AUSTRIA, War commemorative, BULGARIA, War commemorative, VATICAN, Pro Ecclesia 
Cross, GERMANY, German Honour Legion medal, very fine or better (14) £120-150 


148 

Austria-Hungary, Miniature Chains (6), mostly base metal on gilt chains, Nine: Bronze Bravery medal, Franz Joseph, 
unofficial True Deutschland Cross, Karl Truppen Cross, Wound medal, Hungarian War Commemorative, Red Cross Bronze 
Medal 1914, Mobilisation Cross, Military Long Service Decoration, Third class, Iron Cross 1914; Nine:, Bravery Medal (4), 
Large Silver (2) Franz Joseph and Karl, Small Silver Karl, Bronze Franz Joseph, Karl Truppen Cross, Wound Medal, Austria 
War Commemorative, Tyrol War Commemorative, Hungary War Commemorative; Six: Bronze Bravery medal, Karl, 
Hungarian War Commemorative, German Honour Legion, Karl Truppen Cross, Hungarian War Commemorative, Hungarian 
bronze Signum Laudis medal; Five; Small Silver and Small Bronze Bravery medals, both Franz Joseph, Karl Truppen Cross, 
GERMANY, War Commemorative Cross with Swords, Anschluss Medal 1938; Four: Silver Bravery Franz Joseph, GERMANY 
Duppel and Koniggratz Crosses, AUSTRIA, Wound Medal; Four: Golden Jubilee 1898, Diamond Jubilee 1908; Saxony, General 
Honour Cross, Persia, Gold Bravery medal AH 1300, very fine or better (37) £250-300 


149 

Belgian and French Mounted Miniature Groups (7), Eight, BELGIuM, Civic Decoration 1914-18 Second Class, War 
medal, Allied Victory medal, Ligge Commemorative, Resistance medal, 1940-45 War medal, WWII Veterans Cross, FNI recon- 
naissance medal; Eight: BELGIUM, Croix de Feu, Croix de Guerre, Albert I, Order of the Crown, Military Cross, Yser medal, War 
medal, Allied Victory medal, Kingdom Centenary 1930; Six, European Cross, BELGIUM, Albert I Cross of Fidelity, Somme 
Commemorative, Flemish Cross of the Three Cities, 3 clasps, Diksmuide, Nieuwpoort, Ieper, Arras Commemorative, Aisne 
Commemorative; Ten: FRANCE, Medaille Militaire, Croix de Guerre 1914-18, Wound Decoration, Croix du Combatant 
Volontaire, Dardanelles Commemorative, War medal, Allied Victory medal, Medal of the Resistance 1940-44, Ministry of 
Commerce and Industry Gold medal, SERBIA, Milosh Obilich medal, BELGIumM, Workers and Artisans Decoration; Seven: 
European Cross, FRANCE, Combatant’s Cross, Colonial medal, 1 clasp, Maroc, Ministry of Commerce and Industry Silver medal, 
Ministry of Commerce and Industry gold medals (3); Six: FRANCE, uncertain unofficial decoration, 1939-45 War medal, Croix 
de Dévouement Sociale, BELGIUM, Industry and Agriculture Decoration, Workers and Artisans Decoration; Five: FRANCE, Cross 
of Military Valour 1956 with two stars, N. Africa Commemorative, 1 clasp, Algerie, uncertain veteran’s decorations (3), gener- 
ally good very fine or better (52) £250-300 


150 

European Mounted Miniature Groups (4), Fourteen: GREAT BRITAIN, 1939-45, France and Germany Stars, Defence and 
War Medals, FRANCE, Dunkirk medal, National Union of Combatant’s medal, Combatant’s Cross, Allied Fraternity medal, 
European Cross, Franco-British Association 1940-44, I.M.O.S. ‘Sphinx’ Inter Allied Distinguished Service Cross, ‘Sphinx’ 
Cross, BELGIUM, Albert I Cross of Fidelity, Federation of Veterans of Albert I; Thirteen: FRANCE, Franco-British Association 
1940-44, Victory Cross, European Cross, BELGIUM, Albert I Cross of Fidelity, I.M.O.S. Eisenhower medal, FRANCE, Aisne Cross, 
Marne medal, Dunkirk Medal, Europe medal, Somme medal, British Alliance medal, uncertain cross, I.M.O.S. General 
Strzelezyk ‘Sphinx’ medal; Six: FRANCE, Franco-British Association 1940-44, Family Medal, National Order of Vietnam, Public 
Encouragement medal, uncertain green enamelled cross, Order of Courtesy; Five: FRANCE, European Cross, Somme medal, 
Dunkirk medal, BELGIuM, Albert I Cross of Fidelity, Aisne medal, good very fine or better (38) £150-200 


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151 

*Imperial German, Miniature Chain of Five, by Godet, 1870-71 War medal, non-combatant issue, Koniggratz Cross 
1866, Centenary medal 1897, Reserve Long Service Cross for 20 years, Jerusalem Cross 1898, in silver gilt, mounted on gilt 
chain, good very fine, last rare (5) £150-200 


152 

Imperial German, Miniature Chain of Five, all base metal, Iron Cross 1870 with 25 years oak leaf, Saxony, Honour Cross 
for Volunteer Nursing in War 1914-18, Reserve Long Service medal, 1870-71 War medal, Centenary medal 1897, mounted on 
gilt chain; Four, BADEN, Friedrich-Louise medal 1906, in silver, AUSTRIA , WWI commemorative. WURTTEMBERG, Civil Merit 
Medal, Wilhelm II, in silver; SAxE-CoBURG-GOTHA, Order of Ernestine, Silver Merit Medal, type 1 (1835-95), in silver, mount- 
ed on double gold chain, very fine or better (9) £200-300 


153 

Imperial Germany, Miniature Chains (5), mostly base metal on gilt chains, Seven: by Siedlatzek, MECKLENBURG- 
SCHWERIN, Military Merit Cross 1914-18, MECKLENBUG-STRELITZ, War Merit Cross 1914-18, Iron Cross 1914, Prussia, House 
Order of Hohenzollern, with Crown and Swords, 25 Years Officer’s Long Service Cross, Centenary medal 1897, HAMBurG, 
Hanseatic Cross; Seven: Iron Cross 1914, Prussia, War Merit Cross 1916, General Merit Cross type V, General Merit silver 
medal, 25 Years Officer’s Long Service Cross, Centenary Medal 1897, LippE, War Merit Cross 1914; Six: Iron Cross 1914, 
Prussia, Order of the Crown, Fourth Class with Swords; MECKLENBURG-SCHWERIN, Military Merit Cross 1914-18, War 
Commemorative Cross with Swords, South West Africa Campaign 1904-06, Combatant issue, Centenary Medal 1897; Four: 
Iron Cross 1914, Saxony, War Merit Cross 1914, Gold Wound badge, War Commemorative Cross with Swords; Four: 
WURTTEMBERG, Silver War Merit medal Wilhelm II, War Commemorative Cross with Swords, WURTTEMBERG, Long Service 
medal, Third Class, AUSTRIA, War Commemorative; together with miniature Black Wound Medal mounted on gilt swords and 
Miniature Centenary medal 1897, very fine or better (30) £180-220 


154 

Germany, Great War Period Miniature Chains (5), mostly base metal and on gilt chains, Eight: AusTriA, Karl Truppen 
Crosses (2), Wound Medal, HuNGary, War Commemorative; GERMANY, Prussian Veterans Honour Cross 1914-18, with Swords, 
BULGARIA, War Commemorative, GERMANY, Honour Legion Medal, and silver eagle facing left with helmet and crossed swords 
on breast, rev. GUT U. BLUT FUR DIE HEIMAT; Six: SAXONY, Friedrich August medals (2), silver and bronze, Iron Cross 1914, Saxon 
Long Service medal for 9 Years, Honour Legion medal, Kyffhauser medal; Six: Iron Cross 1914, War Commemorative Cross 
with Swords, Prussia, War Merit Cross 1916, Officer’s Long Service Cross for 25 Years, Honour Legion Medal, Centenary medal 
1897; Five: BAVARIA, Ludwig Cross, Prussia, War Merit Cross, Marianer Cross 1914, in silver and enamels, Iron Cross 1914, 
Silesian Eagle; Four, War Commemorative Cross with swords, BRUNSWICK, War Merit Cross, Iron Cross 1914, Deutsches Feld- 
Ehrenabzeichen, very fine or better (29) £180-220 


155 

Germany, Imperial and Later Miniature Chains (3), mostly base metal and on gilt chains, Eight: Great War Third class 
Wound badge, THIRD REICH Western Wall medal, Sudetenland Annexation medal, SS 8 Year Faithful Service Medal, NDSAP 
Bronze Faithful Service Cross, Army Long Service (2), Cross for 18 Years and Medal for 4 Yeats, Baltic Cross; Six: Iron Cross 
1914, MECKLENBURG-SCHWERIN, Military Merit Cross 1914-18, BRUNSWICK, War Merit Cross, with clasp, THIRD REICH , War 
Commemorative Cross with Swords, Wehrmacht Faithful Service Cross for 25 Years, Great War Wound medal, Third Class; 
Five: Sudetenland Annexation and Anschluss medals, War Commemorative Cross without Swords, Centenary Medal 1897, 
Prussia, Military Long Service Medal for 12 Years, last with two awards lacking, very fine or better (19) £120-150 


156 

Italy, Mounted Miniature Groups (5), Sixteen: Bronze Al Valore Militare, Republic issue, War Merit Crosses (3), Republic 
Order of Merit, Officer’s badge, Order of Colonial Merit, Long Service Cross for 25 Years, March on Rome medal 1922, Libya cam- 
paign, Volunteer’s medal, 1940-43 and 1943-45 War medals, Commander’s Silver Long Service Medal, Order of Vittoria Veneto, 
Italian Unity medal 1918, Allied Victory medal, mounted on two rows; Ten; War Merit Cross, Volunteer’s Medal, War Medal 
1915-18, Italian Unity Medal 1918, Allied Victory Medal, Third Army Cross, Silver Army Cross, Fourth Army Cross, Order of 
Italian Solidarity, POLAND, Order of Polonia Restituta (this lacking obverse centre); Six: Great Britain, O.B.E., type 2, Order of the 
Crown in gold and enamels, War Merit Cross, War medal, Italian Unity medal 1918, Allied Victory Medal; Five: War Merit Cross, 
War medal, Italian Unity medal 1918, , Victory medal, Third Army Cross; Four: War Medal, with star on riband, FRANCE, Palmes 
Académiques, Joan of Are Commemorative; unmounted group of five, Italian Unity Medal 1918, War Merit Cross, Allied Victory 
Medal, March on Rome medal 1922, Fascist Youth Movement Merit medal, very fine or better (46) £200-300 


157 

Nepal, Mounted Miniature Groups with Foreign Decorations (3) all of local manufacture, Nine: Order of Trishakti- 
Patta, Fourth Class; Order of Gorkha-Dakshina-Bahu, Fourth Class, King Mahendra, Bihendra and Gayendra Coronations, 
High Altitude Medal, Military Long Service Decoration, Army Long Service, YUGOSLAVIA, Order of the Yugoslav Flag; Eight: 
Order of Gorkha-Dakshina-Bahu, Fourth Class, King Bihendra Coronation, High Altitude Medal, Police Long Service Medal, 
SARC Medal, A.D.C. Service Medal, Referendum Medal 1981, FRANCE, National Order of Merit; Six: Order of Gorkha- 
Dakshina-Bahu, Fourth Class, Civil Service Decoration and Long Service Medal, High Altitude Medal, FRANCE, Légion 
d’Honneur; GREAT BRITAIN, Royal Victorian Medal, Elizabeth II (awarded for the Royal Visit of 1961), the Royal Victorian 
Medal uniface and especially crude, generally very fine (23) £120-150 


158 
Nepal, Mounted Miniature Groups with Orders (3), all locally made, Nine: Order of Nepal-Tara, Military Long Service 
for 25 years, riband of the Order of Om-Rama-Patta, King Mahendra Coronation 1935, Army Long Service, GREAT BRITAIN, 
Burma Star (2), one mounted on 1939-1945 Star riband, Defence and War Medal; Seven: Order of Trishakti-Patta, First Class 
badge, King Mahendra and Gayendra Coronations, Overseas Service Medal, SARC Medal, Earthquake 1988; Six: Order of 
Gorkha-Dakshina-Bahu, Fourth Class, King Bihendra Coronation, Police Long Service Decoration and Medal, Referendum 
1981; other locally made mounted miniature groups (7), Six: Overseas Service Medal, Military Service Medal, Guards Service 
Medal, SARC Medal, Earthquake 1988, U.N. Lebanon; Five: High Altitude Medal, Overseas Service Medal, Military Long 
Service Decoration, Army Long Service, U.N. Lebanon; Four: High Altitude Medal, Overseas Service Medal, Army Long 
Service Medal, U.N. Former Yugoslavia; Four: High Altitude Medal, Overseas Service Medal, Army Long Service Medal, U.N. 
Lebanon; Four: High Altitude Medal, Army Long Service, Social Merit Medal, SARC Medal; Trio: King Bihendra Coronation, 
Civil Service Long Service Decoration and Medal; Pair: Social Merit Medal and Referendum 1981, very fine or better (50) 
£200-300 


159 

South Asian Mounted Miniature Groups (5), INDIA, Five: Vayu Sena medal, General Service medal (riband only), Samar 
Seva Star, Raksha medal, Sainya Seva medal with three clasps; MYANMAR Five: 1986-87 War Medal, Mineyan-Maetharwar 
medal 1988, Service medal, Contribution medal, War Medal; PAKISTAN (3) Ten: Sitara-I-Herb 1391, Tamgha-I-Jang 1391, 10 
and 20 Years Long Service, Jinnah Centenary 1397, Hijri medal 1401, Democracy Medal 1409, Revolution Golden Jubilee 1410, 
GREAT BRITAIN Coronation 1953; Five: Sitara-i-Herb 1391, Tamgha-I-Jang (2), 1385 and 1391, Jinnah Centenary 1391, Hijri 
medal 1401; Trio: 20 years Long Service, Nuclear Test Medal 1418, Independence Golden Jubilee 1997, very fine and better 
(28) £100-150 


Other Properties 


160 

Dress Miniatures, Trio attributed to Sir Robert William Targett, comprising Order of the Indian Empire, in silver- 
gilt and enamels, Jubilee 1935, Coronation 1937; together with a group of four attributed to Lieutenant Henry Targett, 
Royal West Surrey Regiment, comprising C.B.E. type 1, 1914 Star, War and Victory Medals, both groups mounted for 
wearing, good very fine or better (7) £100-150 


Acquired by the present owner from Lady Targett, La Cible House, Rozel Bay, Jersey approximately 40 years ago. 


SESSION TWO 


Wednesday 2 July 2014, starting at 2.00pm 


BRITISH CAMPAIGN MEDALS 





161 
*Earl St. Vincent’s Testimony of Approbation 1800, in silver, well-worn, better than fine £300-350 





162 
*Military General Service 1793-1814, 4 clasps Vittoria, St Sebastian, Orthes, Toulouse (T. Dennison, Gunner, R. 
Arty.), some scuffs and rim bruises, about very fine £1,400-1,800 


Roll confirms GUNNER THOMAS DENNISON, wounded at San Sebastian. 


163 
*Military General Service 1793-1814, 7 clasps Talavera, Busaco, Vittoria, Pyrenees, Nive, Orthes, Toulouse (P. 
Gallagher, Serjt. 315' Foot), polished in the past, better than very fine £1,800-2,200 


Roll confirms. 





164 

*Egypt Campaign Pair awarded to Paymaster Michael Jones, 1 Battalion 30" Regiment of Foot: 

Military General Service 1793-1814, 1 clasp, Egypt (Michl. Jones, Paymr. 30" Foot), and 

Sultan’s Gold Medal for Egypt 1801, a contemporary privately-made piece, 39mm, 

first better than very fine, second lacking usual hook-and-chain suspension but with small portion of original riband 
attached to ring, about very fine; together with a contemporary portrait miniature of the recipient and an early 19th Century 
finely-embroidered double-sided banner reading EGyPT in gold-coloured thread on blue silk, over a red ground and embel- 
lished with laurel sprays, length 170mm (lot) £6,000-8,000 


M.G.S. confirmed on the Egypt Officers’ List. 


MICHAEL JONES later transferred to the 80" Foot and was placed on half-pay 25 August 1819. Part of a family group; see also lot 175. 





168 


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165 


*Saxe-Coburg-Altenburg, Waterloo medal in parcel-gilt bronze, as awarded to NCOs, fine £300-400 
166 

*Army of India 1799-1826, short hyphen, 1 clasp Battle of Deig, renamed (diameter 35mm) in impressed capitals of offi- 
cial style (Sepoy Tulsi Ram, 2" N.I.), worn overall and swivel slightly slack, fine £500-700 


Puddester records Sepoy Tulsi Ram’s medal as having appeared in Glendining auctions in May 1911, 1920, on 1 August 1934 and 28 Sept. 
1988 (when described as renamed). 


167 
*Army of India 1799-1826, short hyphen, 1 clasp Kirkee and Poona (Corpl. E. Davis Eurn. Regt.), initial officially cor- 
rected, good very fine £2,000-2,500 


Roll confirms CorPpoRAL Epwarp Davis, 18" Bombay European Regiment (103"), Purchased Spink medal supplement 1990, ex Glendining 
September 1950, Spink January 1951, June 1952, Lusted February 1972, Cocksedge February 1975 and Spink Medal Supplement 1986; with 
brief biographical details. 


168 
*Army of India 1799-1826, short hyphen, 1 clasp Nepaul (Elijah Over, 66" Foot.), a few surface scuffs from handling, 
otherwise good extremely fine £1,200-1,500 


Roll confirms; offered with photocopied research. Purchased Baldwin’s May 1995. 


169 
*Army of India 1799-1826, long hyphen, 1 clasp Seetabuldee & Nagpore, impressed in India (Custoory Rungiah, 39" 
Regt. Native Infy.), very fine £2,000-3,000 


Puddester records confirmation of issuance in the ‘Roll of India Medals issued from the Adjutant-General’s Office’ of the medal to PRIVATE 
CusToory RUNGIAH, 20 Madras Native Infantry, on 31°t October 1854 (by which time the 20" Madras Native Infantry had become the 39"). 
Ex Gascoigne Collection (1930), Hayward’s Gazette, June 1975, Glendining, October 1981 and Spink, 28 March 1995, lot 396. 


170 
*Army of India 1799-1826, short hyphen, 1 clasp Ava (Lieut. W.L.G. Williams, 3"¢ N.I.), a few surface marks, good 
very fine £1,400-1,600 


Mentioned in Lieutenant Colonel H.H. Pepper’s dispatches [sic], London Gazette: 5 July 1826: 
‘..and from Lieutenant Williams, commanding 3"¢ Regiment P.L.I. not only for his anxiety and zeal, but from the able assistance I have 
derived from his perfect knowledge of the Burmese language.’ 


Roll confirms LIEUTENANT WATKIN L. WILLIAMS, 3"¢ Native Light Infantry (later to become Major-General Sir Watkin Williams). 


Ex Sotheby’s, 10 July 1968 (when offered with an unnamed I.G.S. with clasp Pegu) and Dix, Noonan & Webb, 8 December 1994. WATKIN LEWIS 
GRIFFIES WILLIAMS became Colonel of the 3rd (Palamcottah) Light Infantry in August 1854 and was promoted Major General the following 
November. With photocopied service details. 


171 

*Army of India 1799-1826, short hyphen, 1 clasp Ava, officially engraved (Christopher Blake, H.E.I.C. Brig Sophia.), 

has been brooch-mounted (on obverse) and with edge repair at 11 o’clock (on reverse), suspension refixed, fine and very rare 
£1,500-2,000 


Confirmed on Capt. Douglas-Morris’s roll (2"¢ Officer / Mate, Sophia and Goliath). 


172 
*Army of India 1799-1826, short hyphen, 1 clasp Bhurtpoor (J. Smith, 16" Lt. Dragns.), very fine £900-1,100 


Roll confirms two possible recipients named J. SmirH — Jeremiah Smith and John Smith, the latter being entitled additionally to a M.G.S. 
with 5 clasps. Offered with photocopied service papers for Jeremiah Smith. 


173 
*Army of India 1799-1826, short hyphen, 2 clasps Assye, Argaum (Cornet Robert Close 4" Lt. Cavy.) light overall 
wear, good very fine £2,500-3,000 


Roll confirms. Cadet Madras Establishment 1800; Cornet 29" sept. 1801; Lieutenant 1 May 1804; Captain, 27" Dec. 1816; Major, 28" Aug. 
1821; retired to England, 5 June 1826; died on 5" Jan. 1857, aged 71; with copied research. 


Ex Elson Collection, Glendining, 27 Feb. 1963, Spink auction, 28 March 1995 and Dixon’s Gazette, December 1995. 








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174 
*Army of India 1799-1826, short hyphen, 3 clasps Battle of Delhi, Laswarree, Capture of Deig (Cornet Harry Thomson, 


6 Lt. Cavy.), extremely fine, lightly toned £3,000-4,000 
Roll confirms; HARRY THOMSON (or Thompson) was a Cadet on Bengal Establishment, 1798, arriving in India 1799; Cornet, 6" Light Cavalry, 
20th June 1800; Lieutenant, 22"4 Dec. 1803, serving in Jumna Doab and the Second Mahratta War; Acting Quartermaster, 6" Light Cavalry, 
1816; transferred to 10 Bengal Light Cavalry, becoming Lieutenant-Colonel in 1825; Colonel, 1 Dec. 1829; Major-General, 1838; General, 
1851; died in 1878. Offered with photocopied service papers. 


Ex Spink auction 28 March 1995 and Medal Circular, April 1996 


175 
*Ghuznee 1839, (reverse engraved in capitals Lieut. John Francis Jones-17" Regt. Foot), extremely fine £1,000-1,200 


JOHN FRANCIS JONES purchased his lieutenancy in the 17“ Foot in April 1839; transferred to the 6" Foot in May 1840 and the 60" Foot in 
March 1842; captain August 1849, he resigned his commission in February 1851. 


This lot forms part of a family group see also lot 164. 


176 
*Ghuznee 1839, unnamed as issued, a few minor rim knocks, good very fine £350-400 
177 
*Afghanistan 1842, rev., Candahar 1842, unnamed, original steel clip and steel straight bar suspension, very fine to good 
very fine £2350-400 
178 
*Afghanistan 1842, rev., Cabul 1842, engraved serif capitals for the British Army (Private John Stolden, Her Majesty’s 
31° Regt.), with replacement steel clip and plain ring suspension, heavily polished in the past, about fine £250-300 
179 
*Afghanistan 1842, rev., Candahar, Ghuznee, Cabul 1842, engraved serif capitals for the British Army (Thos. Mahon, 41°t 
Regt.), with steel clip and contemporary split-ring suspension, good fine £500-600 
180 


*Jellalabad 1842, Mural Crown type, impressed in upper and lower case letters (Pte. John Fitzharriss. XIII or 
P.A.L.I.), heavily tooled above and beside crown, pierced and fitted with unofficial silver wire suspension, fine £400-500 


181 
*China 1842 (Lionel R. Place. Mate. H.M.S. Melville), has been gilt and with replacement loop suspension, about very 
fine £150-200 


LIONEL READ PLACE joined the Navy 31 October 1829, he was promoted to Lieutenant in 1842, the same year he was court-martialled and sub- 
sequently acquitted for bad conduct. He died 24 May 1854 at Barnstaple. 


182 
*Scinde 1843, rev., Meeanee Hyderabad 1843, engraved serif capitals (Capt. C. Garrett. 9t* Lgt. Cavy.), original steel 
clip and steel straight bar suspension, polished in the past, very fine £1,200-1,500 


Killed in action, 24 March 1843. In the Bombay General Orders of April 1843 Sir Charles Napier wrote of his deep regret “at the loss of the 
brave and excellent Captain Garrett, who fell honourably in the Battle of Dubba, near Hyderabad”. Garrett had previously distinguished 
himself at the Battle of Meeanee, where his life was saved by Trooper Mooke Sing of the 9" Light Cavalry. 


CAPTAIN CHARLES GARRETT, 9th Bengal Light Cavalry, was the son of Vice-Admiral Henry Garrett, RN. He was born on 15th July 1809 at 
Deptford, Kent, becoming a Cadet in 1825. He married Frances Smith at Nimach, India in 1832 and is commemorated with others on a 
Memorial Tablet now in Chester Cathedral (having been moved in 1952 from St. Thomas Church, Hyderabad) and inscribed : “To The 
Memory Of The Officers And Men Who Fell In The Battles Of Meanee And Hyderabad Under Major General Sir Charles Napier, KCB, The 
Conqueror Of Sind” 


Ex Sotheby’s, 10 November 1988, lot 16. 


183 
*Scinde 1843, rev., Hyderabad 1843, impressed for the Indian Army (Private Dowlut Ram. 6" Regt. N.I.), pierced and 
fitted with silver ring and wire suspension, a few scuffs, good very fine £400-600 


acct 


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184 


*Maharajpoor Star, 29" Decr. 1843 (Serjeant William Alsop of the Corp of Sappers & Miners), with original brass 
hook suspension as issued, good very fine £500-700 


185 


*Sutlej 1846, rev., Aliwal, no clasp, impressed (Hy. Appleby 16" Lancers), two or three surface and rim nicks, good very 
fine to extremely fine £1,400-1,600 


Killed in action at Aliwal, 28 January 1846; roll confirms. 


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186 
*Sutlej 1846, rev., Aliwal, no clasp, an unnamed specimen striking, prooflike surfaces, virtually mint state £200-300 


187 

*Sutlej 1846, rev., Ferozeshuhur, 1 clasp Sobraon, impressed (James Alexander 62™ Regt.), one or two knocks and 
scuffs, very fine to good very fine £350-400 
188 


*Sutlej 1846, rev., Moodkee, 2 clasps Ferozeshuhur, Sobraon, impressed (William Lloyd 80" Regt.), polished, swivel 
slightly loose, good fine £350-400 


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189 

*An India Campaign Group awarded to Sergeant-Major Nathaniel W. Bancroft, Royal Horse Artillery, late Bengal 
Horse Artillery and Author of From Recruit to Staff Sergeant, Four, comprising: Sutlej 1846, rev., Moodkee, 3 clasps 
arranged with an unofficial “Moodkee’” clasp at top, Ferozeshuhur in centre and Sobraon below, impressed (Corpl. N: Bancroft 1st 
Brigade H:A:); Punjab 1848, 2 clasps Chilianwala, Goojerat, impressed (Serjt. N.W. Bancroft, 2nd Tp. ist Bde. H. Arty.); 
India General Service 1854, with unofficial Northwest Frontier clasp, unofficially named or renamed in engraved capitals (Sergt. 
Major N.W. Bancroft ist Bde. B.H.A.), see below; and Indian Mutiny 1857-1859, 2 clasps Delhi, Lucknow, impressed (Gunr 
N.W. Bancroft, ist Bde. Bengl. H. Art.), contact wear and with some adjustments / repairs to medal carriages, generally very 
fine, mounted with a set of 4 contemporary engraved silver riband brooches for wearing (4) £2,500-3,000 


Additionally entitled to a Relief of Lucknow clasp and to a silver Royal Victorian Medal, but not entitled to the I.G.S.. A reprint copy of 
Bancroft’s autobiography From Recruit to Staff Sergeant, which also includes service records, is included in the lot. 


NATHANIEL BANCROFT enlisted in the Bengal Horse Artillery on 1 February 1833, aged 9, as an underage half-pay 
gunner. He became a Trumpeter on 7 December 1841, Gunner 24 April 1845, Bombardier 1 May 1845 and Pay § 
Sergeant 1 July 1845. He participated in the battles of Moodkee, Ferozeshuhur (severely wounded in the right 
arm by cannon shot), and Sobraon. Almost 50 pages of his autobiography refer to his experiences in the various 
First Sikh War campaigns. On 17 January 1846 he was promoted to Corporal and to Sergeant, 13 April 1847. His 
troop was not generally entitled to the Chilianwala and Goojerat clasps to the Punjab Medal but at least one offi- 
cer attained them (attached to the Horse Artillery Brigade) and Bancroft’s Record of Service gives evidence of 
his entitlement also, although his memoirs make surprisingly scant mention of the Second Sikh War. 


From 1850-54 he was constantly engaged on the North West Frontier against the Mohmands and hill tribes with 
Sir Colin Campbell’s forces. He does not appear to have qualified officially for a medal and clasp so must have 
had the piece here offered made up to his own specification, with a clasp in “Mutiny style”. During his period on 
the North West Frontier he was promoted to Staff Sergeant, 27 September 1852 and Quarter-Master-Sergeant, 
12 October 1853, to the 7 Regiment Light Cavalry. On 24 November 1855 he was appointed Sergeant Major to 
the Murree Depot but on the 24" October 1856 he was remanded to the Artillery Regiment at his own request, 
with the rank of Sergeant. On 7 April 1857 he was reduced by sentence of Regimental Court Martial to Private. 
His offence, as a staunch member of the Army Temperance Association, was presumably not alcohol-related but 
is not recorded, although he is known to have had poor relations with Major Tombs, his troop’s commander. 





He served with great distinction in the Indian Mutiny, engaging with the enemy in the Meerut and Bolundshuhur districts during the Siege 
of Delhi, affairs of Jhingoorie, Siege and Capture of Lucknow, and throughout the Rohilkund Campaign as well as several other actions. As a 
result of his distinguished services during the Mutiny he was restored to Sergeant on 16 January 1859 and then promoted to Staff Sergeant 
the following day, with his pension rights reinstated. On 1 May 1861 he volunteered for the Royal Horse Artillery on the disbandment of the 
Bengal Artillery, retaining the rank of Staff Sergeant, and was discharged on 12 June 1866 after over 33 years’ service. 


Rudyard Kipling’s celebrated poem Snarleyow is based closely on an episode in Bancroft’s 1885 autobiography From Recruit to Staff 
Sergeant, which Kipling reviewed. Bancroft applied hopefully for the 1897 Diamond Jubilee medal, to which he was not entitled. However 
letters from Queen Victoria’s Private Secretary in the archives of the Royal Artillery Institution reveal that Her Majesty was so moved by her 
reading of From Recruit to Staff Sergeant that she was graciously pleased to award him instead the Medal of the Royal Victorian Order, which 
he received in 1900; on the roll he is listed as ‘An Old Artillery Pensioner at Simla.’ 


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190 
*Punjab 1848, 1 clasp Mooltan, impressed (Lieut. Col. R.A. Stedman, C.B., 15‘ Bengal Cavy.), with contact wear and 
several rim bruises, good fine to very fine £600-800 


C.B. London Gazette: 27 June 1846; also entitled to the Sutlej medal, reverse Aliwal. Lieutenant Colonel Robert Adrian Stedman died at sea 
aboard SS Haddington 12 April 1849 between Calcutta and Madras. Offered with photocopied service details. 


191 
*Punjab 1848, 1 clasp Chilianwala, impressed (W.H. Bailey, 24" Foot), sometime cleaned and with a rim bruise, very 
fine to good very fine £1,000-1,500 


Killed in action at Chilianwala, 13 January 1849; roll confirms. 


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192 

*Punjab 1848, 2 clasps Chilianwala, Goojerat, an unnamed specimen striking with the clasps perhaps added or refixed, a few 
light scuffs, good extremely fine £200-300 
193 

*Punjab 1848, 2 clasps Mooltan, Goojerat, impressed for Indian Army (Private. Alla Bux. Scinde. Camel. B.C.), mini- 
mal marks, extremely fine £300-400 
194 


*South Africa 1853, impressed (A. Tomkinson. 1“ Btn. Rifle Bde.), suspension clip with soft solder repair, otherwise 
very fine £200-300 





195 

*A Group of Four awarded to Private George Bale, 43™¢ Foot, comprising: 

South Africa 1853 (Geo. Bale, 43"¢ Regt.); 

Indian Mutiny 1857-1859, no clasp (Geo. Bale, 43° Lt. Infy.); 

New Zealand 1845-1866, reverse undated (3150. G. Bale 43"4 Regt,); and 

Army Long Service and Good Conduct Medal, type 2 (3150 Geo. Ball [sic] 434 Foot), 

very fine and better £1,200-1,500 


Offered with copy research, including service record and regimental rolls for the Third Kaffir War, Indian Mutiny and New Zealand Campaigns. 


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196 
*India General Service 1854, 1 clasp Pegu, impressed in small serif capitals (Jas. Crossen. 18" Royal Irish Regt.), 
sometime cleaned and with a rim bruise, very fine to good very fine £800-1,000 


Killed in action during the Second Burma War at Rangoon, 14 April 1852; roll confirms (as ‘Crossin’). Offered with copied excerpt of regi- 
mental history and casualty list. 


197 
*India General Service 1854, 1 clasp Persia, impressed (J. Fulton, 78 Highlanders), very fine £400-600 
198 
*India General Service 1854, 1 clasp Northwest Frontier, impressed (350 P. O Brien 1 Bn. H M.’s 19" Regt.), con- 
siderable contact wear and with a rim knock, fine £200-300 


Also entitled to Crimea, 1 clasp Sebastopol, served in the Hazara campaign of 1868; offered with photocopied discharge and medical papers. 








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199 


*India General Service 1854, 1 clasp Umbeyla, impressed (635 J. Kennedy 101st Regt.), very fine £200-300 
200 
*India General Service 1854, 1 clasp Perak, engraved serif capitals (G.E. Hoar. Ord.: H.M.S. “Ringdove.”), some sur- 
face scratches and with a pawnbroker’s mark, about very fine £200-300 
201 
India General Service 1854, in bronze, 1 clasp Burma 1885-7, engraved in running script (Syce Bhoosi 15* Bombay 
Lers), good very fine £70-100 
202 
India General Service 1854, 1 clasp Burma 1887-89, engraved in running script (533 Pte. J. Burgess 1°* Bn. Hamps. 
R.), swivel a little loose, virtually extremely fine £150-180 
203 
India General Service 1854, 1 clasp Chin Lushai 1889-90, engraved in running script (4323 Sapper Moonisamy 6 Co. 
“Q.0.” Sappers & Miners), minor marks, good very fine £120-150 
204 
India General Service 1854, 1 clasp Hazara 1891, engraved in running script (60835 Trumpr. E. Brown No 9 Mn. Bty. 
R.A.), very fine £150-200 
205 


*India General Service 1854, 1 clasp Hunza 1891 (Naick Ummon Khan 24" Regt. N.I.), scuffed, good fine £300-400 


206 
India General Service 1854, 1 clasp Burma 1889-92, engraved in running script (2153 Pte W. Anderson 2™ Bn. Devon 
Regt.), graze on warrior’s arm, otherwise good extremely fine £180-220 
207 


*India General Service 1854, 2 clasps Naga - 1879-90, Burma 1885-87, engraved in running script with small correction 
after name / before unit (Sepoy Sreedher Opudia 44" Regt. N.I.), lightly chased in fields and suspension slack, fine or 
good fine £200-300 


208 
*India General Service 1854, 4 clasps Burma 1885-87, Burma 1887-89, Chin Lushai 1889-90, Waziristan 1894-5, engraved 
in running script (2930 Sapper Badhatiya (?) Singh Bengal Sappers & Miners), well worn overall and suspension re- 


soldered, fine £200-300 
209 
*Baltic 1854, privately engraved (F. Cavill. H.M.S. Penelope.), good very fine £150-200 
210 
Crimea 1854, 1 clasp Sebastopol, depot impressed ([3]1795. Corpl. D. Keane. 18" Regt.), very fine £70-100 
211 
Crimea 1854-56, 3 clasps, Alma, Balaklava, Sebastopol (engraved in later style 2548 Pte. J. Morrison 93" Highrs.), 
contact marks and edge bruise, better than very fine, with copied service papers £200-300 


PRIVATE JAMES MorRISON was part of the “Thin Red Line” at the Battle of Balaklava; he later served in the Indian Mutiny where he was dis- 
abled by a gunshot wound in the arm at Lucknow 14 November 1857. 


212 
*Crimea 1854, 4 clasps Alma, Balaklava, Inkermann, Sebastopol, officially impressed (Henry Mole. 20" Regt.), virtual- 
ly extremely fine, with original ribbon £1,000-1,500 


Killed in action at the Battle of Inkermann, 5 November 1854; roll confirms (as “Moles”). Offered with photocopied rolls. 


o1> 
Turkish Crimea 1855, Sardinian issue (Alexr. Forrest 30" Regt.), very fine £60-80 


214 
*Indian Mutiny 1857-58, without clasp, officially renamed in running script (Sowar Gurmuck Singh 13" BI. Lers.), 
very fine £150-200 





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215 
*Indian Mutiny 1857-58, without clasp, impressed (Bugr. Jas. Neal, 3™ Compy. 5" Bn. Foot Art.), good very fine 


£250-300 
216 
*Indian Mutiny 1857-58, without clasp, impressed (John Sharp, 7" Husrs.), good very fine £250-300 
Offered with photocopied details of Mutiny services. 
217 
*Indian Mutiny 1857-58, 1 clasp Delhi, engraved in running script (Sepoy Khoda Buksh Corps of “Guides”), very fine 
£400-600 
218 
*Indian Mutiny 1857-58, 1 clasp Delhi (John Holtby, 75" Regt.), extremely fine and toned £800-1,000 
Killed in action at Delhi on 14 September 1857; roll confirms. 
219 
*Indian Mutiny 1857-58, 1 clasp Lucknow, an officially-impressed late issue (Gunner J. Illson, E. Troop. R.H.A.), 
extremely fine £400-600 


JAMES ILLSON was born at Aylestone, Leicestershire and enlisted with the RHA in 1854. He was imprisoned from the 2 November 1855-31" of 
January 1856 for illegal absence since 21 June 1855. On 22 October 1858 he was severely burnt by the bursting of three abandoned enemy 
guns at Fort Budee and a board of inquiry awarded him 12 rupees and 12 annas in compensation for his destroyed clothing; he subsequently 
died of his wounds on 11 December 1858. Offered with photocopied service details and board of inquiry proceedings. 


220 
*Indian Mutiny 1857-58, 1 clasp Central India, impressed (Serjt. J, Healey, 12" Lancers), contact wear, fine to good 
fine £350-450 
221 


*Indian Mutiny 1857-58, 1 clasp Central India, impressed (Saml. Sturdy, 72™¢ Highlanders), good very fine £300-400 


229 
*Indian Mutiny 1857-58, 2 clasps Delhi, Lucknow, impressed (John Jennison, 1% Bn. 8" Regt.), cleaned and with 
some marks, very fine £400-600 
5D9 
*Indian Mutiny 1857-58, 4 clasps Delhi, Relief of Lucknow, Lucknow, Central India, impressed (Gunr. John Martin, 1°* 
Bn. Bengal Art.), suspension refixed, good fine to very fine £1,800-2,200 


Offered with photocopied documentation including Statement of Service and confirmation of clasps. 


Purchased Liverpool Medals November 1994. 


224 
*China 1857, 1 clasp Taku Forts 1860 (John Griffin, 15* Dragn. Gds.), good fine £200-250 





226 











225 

*A New Zealand Militia Trio awarded to Ensign (later Lieut.-Col.) F.Y. Goring, comprising: 

New Zealand, reverse dated 1861-66 (Ensgn. F.Y. Goring. 18' Waikato Mila.); 

New Zealand Long and Efficient Service Medal, engraved capitals (Lieut. Col. Forster Y. Goring, Late Officer 
Commandg. Auckland Mil. & Vo. Dist. (1901); and 

Colonial Auxiliary Forces Officer’s Decoration, Edward VII issue, hallmarked London, 1909, reverse engraved in cap- 
itals (Lieut-Col. Forster Yelverton Goring, Retired List / 1911), 

extremely fine and toned, with portions of original ribbons as worn (3) £2,000-2,500 


Offered with a biography taken from Gudgeon, Thos. Wayth, The Defenders of New Zealand, Auckland, 1887. Another account of Goring’s 
service appears in The Cyclopedia of New Zealand (Auckland Provincial District), 1902, from which the following is largely taken: 


‘LIEUTENANT-COLONEL FORSTER YELVERTON GORING, of the New Zealand Militia, was born 
in Ireland on the 23rd of July, 1846, and is a son of Mr Forster Goring, of Highden, 
Sussex, and the Hon. Sydney Eloise Yelverton. In 1860 he came to New Zealand. On the 
outbreak of the Maori war Lieutenant-Colonel Goring joined the Auckland Volunteers, 
and went through the campaign. He received a commission in September, 1863, as 
Ensign in Pitt’s First Four Hundred (afterwards the 1st Waikato Regiment of Militia) 
and served through the Waikato campaign under General Cameron. In January, 1865, 
he went to Wanganui, served through the West Coast campaign, and was present at the 
actions of Ngukumara, Patea, under General Chute; in 1866, Lieut.-Colonel Goring 
took part in several engagements including that at Otepawa, and accompanied the 
General in his march round Mount Egmont. Rejoining his regiment at Tauranga in the 
same year, he was present at Ake-Ake and other actions. In the latter part of 1867 
Lieut.-Colonel Goring was appointed Sub-Inspector of the New Zealand Armed 
Constabulary, with the rank of Captain. He went to Opotiki, and under Colonels St. 
John and Fraster, saw service in the Uriwera country. On the outbreak of hostilities on 
the West Coast, in 1868, he was sent there, and was present at Te Ngutu-O-te-Manu 
under Lieut.-Colonel McDonnell (N.Z.C.), where, under fire, he helped to carry Captain 
Rowan, who was badly wounded, off the field. He served under Major-General Sir 
George Whitmore; and at Moturoa, the officer of No. 1 Division being ill. Lieut.-Colonel 
Goring took command of it during the engagement. He was present at the taking of 
Ngatapa in Poverty Bay, where Te Kooti was beaten but escaped. Colonel Goring then 
returned to the West Coast and took part in the actions at Woodall’s Redoubt, Te 
Ngaire, and other places. In 1874 Lieut.-Colonel Goring was appointed inspector, with 
the rank of Major, and took command of the Opotiki district, and was afterwards at 
Waikaremoana, and various camps on the coast. In 1881 he marched to Parthaka and 
was in command of a camp there until 1885. In that year the New Zealand Permanent 
Artillery was raised, and Lieut.-Colonel Goring was appointed its first commanding 
officer, and he claims to be the founder of that branch of the service in New Zealand. He 
was next appointed as commanding officer of the Dunedin District, and in 1890 was 
transferred to Auckland, where he assumed the command of the Permanent Artillery, 
the forts, and the volunteers. Unfortunately, through failing eyesight, Lieut.-Colonel 
Goring was obliged to retire from the command in 1897. He will always be remem- Colonel F.Y. Goring 

bered as a brave and fearless man and a capable soldier. Since his retirement Lieut.- Reproduced by kind permission of the Alexander 
Colonel Goring has resided at Whangarei, where he is now engaged in fruit growing. Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand 
In 1880 he married Bertha Virginia, a daughter of the late Major Herbert Dobie.’ 





Lieutenant-Colonel Goring died in 1923. 


226 
*New Zealand, reverse undated (4131 Wm. Parker, 50" Foot.), very fine £300-350 


Roll confirms. WILLIAM PARKER served for 21 years including the Crimea (entitled to medal with Sebastopol clasp and Turkish Crimea), during 
which time he was court-martialled for stealing a horse. 


B27 
*New Zealand, reverse dated 1861-66, impressed (R. Harris), very fine to good very fine, a scarce civilian award 
£500-700 


The roll records two men named ROBERT Harris — Senior and Junior — who volunteered for, and served with, the Imperial Commissariat 
Transport Corps. 


228 
*New Zealand, reverse dated 1861-66, impressed (G. Hames. 3™ Waikato, Regt.), traces of old lacquer, good extreme- 
ly fine and well toned £600-800 


Roll confirms. 


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229 
*Canada General Service 1866-70, 1 clasp, Fenian Raid 1866 (Pte. J. Dyer, Windsor I. Co.), extremely fine 
£240-260 


230 
*Canada General Service 1866, 2 clasps Fenian Raid 1866, Fenian Raid 1870 (Pte. J. Wilkie, Danville R Co.), suspen- 
sion slightly loose, very fine to good very fine, toned £400-500 


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*Ashantee 1873, 1 clasp Coomassie, (1833 Bugler. W. Dennis. 2. Bn. Rifle, Bde. 1873-4), rim knock and a few sur- 
face marks, about very fine £300-400 
599 
*South Africa 1877-79, 1 clasp 1877-78 (681 Pte. W. Boyde 88" Foot.), good fine to very fine £300-400 
233 


*South Africa 1877-79, 1 clasp 1877-8-9 (530 Pte. D. O’ Neil, 90 Foot), contact marks, better than very fine 
£400-450 





234 
*South Africa 1877-79, 1 clasp 1877-8-9, (1305. Pte. T. Gilder. 1/24" Foot), extremely fine, lightly toned 
£6,000-8,000 


PRIVATE GILDER was killed in action at the Battle of Isandhlwana, 22 January 1879; roll confirms. 


235 
Afghanistan 1878-80, without clasp (2532 Dvr. T. Poxon D/A Bde. R.A.), edge bruise, better than very fine £120-150 


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236 
*Afghanistan 1878-80, without clasp (1387 Pte. S. Boon. 66" Foot.), good very fine £2,000-2,500 


PRIVATE Boon was killed in action at the Battle of Maiwand, 27 July 1880; roll confirms. 


237 


*Afghanistan 1878-80, 1 clasp Ahmed Khel (160, Pte. G. Harris, 4" Bn. Rifle Bde.), good fine £200-250 


238 
*Afghanistan 1878, 4 clasps Peiwar Kotal, Charasia, Kabul, Kandahar (58B/407 Pte. J. Wilson. 72"4 Highrs.), extreme- 
ly fine 


£500-700 
Offered with photocopied Regimental roll. 


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*Kabul to Kandahar Star 1880, engraved (Sepoy Gulab Sing), fine £150-200 
240 


*Egypt 1882, reverse undated, 2 clasps Suakin 1885, Tofrek, officially impressed (F. White, Pte. R.M.L.I.), very fine 


£400-500 





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*Egypt 1882, with reverse dated 1882, 3 clasps Tel-El-Kebir, El-Teb Tamaai, Suakin 1884 (1764. Pte. R. Daley. 19" 
Hussars.), with heavy star-wear, about fine £300-400 


Offered with photocopied Regimental roll. 


242 


*Egypt 1882, reverse dated 1882, 5 clasps Tel-El-Kebir, Suakin 1884, El Teb-Tamaai, The Nile 1884-85, Kirbekan (14849. 
Pte. G. Nixon 19" Hussars.), swivel loose, very fine and toned, rare £1,500-2,000 
243 

Egypt and Special Constabulary Trio awarded to Driver William I. Lindsay, Royal Horse Artillery, Egypt 1882, 
reverse undated, 1 clasp, Suakin 1885 (38503 Driv. W.I. Lindsay, G/B. R.H.A.), Khedive’s Star 1884-86, Special 


Constabulary Long Service, George V, 2 clasps The Great War 1914-18, Long Service 1929 (William Lindsay), first two 
about very fine, last better (3) 


£200-250 
244 
*North West Canada 1885, 1 clasp Saskatchewan, engraved capitals (Pte. G. Warr Q.O.R.), about extremely fine 
£600-800 
245 


Royal Niger Company’s Medal, in bronze, 1 clasp Nigeria, an unnamed specimen, extremely fine £40-60 


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246 
*East and West Africa 1887-1900, 1 clasp Witu 1890, impressed (A.J. Spiller, Gunner R.M.A., H.M.S. Cossack.), 
good very fine £180-220 


Offered with photocopied service details. 


247 
*British South Africa Company’s Medal, 1890-97, rev., Matabeleland 1893, no clasp (1253 Troopr. J. Hurcum. 
B.B. Police), slight contact wear, good very fine £200-300 
248 
*Hunza Nagar Badge 1891, bronze, unnamed, reverse fitted with original eyes and split-pin for suspension, scuffed and 
sometime cleaned, generally very fine £350-450 
249 
India General Service 1895, 1 clasp Punjab Frontier 1897-98 (3751 Pte. J. Roberts. 4 Dragoon Gds:), very fine, with 
riband brooch for wearing £120-150 
250 
India General Service 1895 (2), both Edward VII issue, 1 clasp Waziristan 1901-2 (2770 Sowar Phanyan Singh 1° Pjb 
Cavy / 636 Sowar Santa Singh 2™ Pjb Cavy), very fine to good very fine (2) £120-150 
251 
India General Service 1895, 2 clasps Punjab Frontier 1897-98, Samana 1897 (1032 Sowar Mohan Singh 3" Pjb 
Cavly:), good very fine £60-80 
252 
India General Service 1895, in bronze, 3 clasps Punjab Frontier 1897-98, Samana 1897, Tirah 1897-98 (Grass Cutter 
Malhu 18" Bd. Lers.), good very fine £100-120 
253 
*Ashanti Star 1896, regimentally engraved (2965 Pte. R. Wainwright 2. W. Yorks R.), good very fine, with original 
(worn) ribbon £350-450 


Offered with copied documentation. 


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254 

*An Omdurman Charger’s Pair awarded to Corporal T. King, 21%t Lancers, comprising 

Queen’s Sudan 1896 (1724 C’pl. T. King 21/Lcrs); 

Khedive’s Sudan 1896-1908, 2 of 2, 1 clasp Khartoum (1724 Corpl. T. King), 

official correction to rank (which was evidently entered at first as ‘Pte.’), good very fine (2) £2,500-3,500 


Confirmed (Squadron B) as having been injured during the Charge at Omdurman, 2nd September 1898, and offered with a copy of a relating 
article by Ian McInnes. 


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255 
*Queen’s South Africa 1899, 4 clasps Elandslaagte, Defence of Ladysmith, Orange Free State, Belfast, engraved (4213 
Pte. J. Hill. 5/Lers.), cleaned in the past, about extremely fine £300-400 
256 
Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 4 clasps Tugela Heights, Relief of Ladysmith, Transvaal, Laing’s Neck (10179 Pte. 
W.R. Jolley, R.A.M.C.), virtually mint state and toned £120-150 
257 


Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 4 clasps Cape Colony, Orange Free State, Johannesburg, South Africa 1901 (5491 Pte. 
W. D. Hutchison. 2™ V.B. Norfolk Regt.), edge bruise, very fine £150-200 


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258 
Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 4 clasps, Cape Colony, Transvaal, Wittebergen, South Africa 1901 (9861 Pte. J. H. 
Williams, 4™ Coy, 15 Imp. Yeo.), edge bruised, very fine £150-200 


4 Company, ist Imperial Yeomanry, was formed of volunteers from Glamorgan. 


259 
Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 5 clasps Talana, Relief of Ladysmith, Laing’s Nek, Tugela Heights, Transvaal (4578Pte. 
J.O’ Connor, RI. Dublin Fus:), good very fine £140-180 


Offered with photocopied service papers and death certificate. 


260 
Queen’s South Africa 1899, 5 clasps Cape Colony, Orange Free State, Transvaal, South Africa, 1901, South Africa 1902, 
impressed (27646 Tpr: R. Stephens. Imp: Yeo:), very fine £70-90 


Offered with photocopied service papers. 


261 
Queen’s South Africa 1899, 6 clasps Relief of Kimberley, Paardeberg, Driefontein, Johannesburg, Diamond Hill, 
Wittebergen, impressed (2971. Cpl. C. George, 10 Hussars), some scuffs, good very fine £140-180 
262 
Queen’s South Africa 1899, 6 clasps Cape Colony, Tugela Heights, Orange Free State, Relief of Ladysmith, Transvaal, 
Laing’s Nek, impressed (5671 Pte. W. Hodson, 1: Yk: & Lance:. Regt.), very fine £120-150 
263 
*Queen’s South Africa 1899, 7 clasps Belmont, Modder River, Paardeberg, Driefontein, Johannesburg, Diamond Hill, 
Belfast, impressed (7232 Pte. A. Adams, R.M, H.M.S. Monarch), very fine £600-800 


PRIVATE ADAMS was wounded at Graspan on 25 November 1899. Offered with photocopied service papers and confirmation of clasps. 


264 

Boer War and Great War Casualty Pair awarded to Private William Vine, Royal Sussex Regiment, late Royal 
Sussex Mounted Infantry: Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 4 clasps, Transvaal, Orange Free State, South Africa 1901, 
South Africa 1902 (6171 Pte. W. Vine. R. Suss: R.M.I.) and British War Medal (L-6171 Pte. W. Vine. R. Suss. R.), first 
with slight edge bruising, very fine, second extremely fine (2) £180-220 


PRIVATE WILLIAM VINE was killed at Aubers Ridge on 9 May 1915 and is commemorated on the Le Touret Memorial. 


265 

Boer War, Great War and I.S.M. Group awarded to Private / Sapper C.W. Willis, Five: Queen’s South Africa 1899, 
5 Clasps Tugela Heights, Orange Free State, Relief of Ladysmith, Transvaal, Laing’s Nek and King’s South Africa, 2 clasps (both 
4889 Pte. C. Willis, Devon Regt.); British War Medal and Victory Medal (both 510316 Spr. C.W. Willis. R.E.); and 
Imperial Service Medal, George VI (Charles William Willis), very fine to extremely fine (5) £180-220 


I.S.M.: London Gazette: 5 April 1940 (Postman, Exeter). Offered with photocopied service details. 


266 
*Kimberley Star 1899-1900, reverse hallmarked Birmingham 1901, good very fine £180-220 
267 
*Anglo-Boere Oorlog 1899-1902, impressed (Burger G.J.J. Vorster), very fine £200-300 
268 


*China 1900, 1 clasp Relief of Pekin (T. Wright, Lg. Smn. H.M.S. Centurion.), extremely fine and toned £700-900 


The recipient is recorded as having died at R.N. quarters, Leu Kung Tan, on 27 July 1900 of wounds received on the 23 June at Wei-Hai-Wei. The 
Times’ casualty list of 3 July 1900 had previously reported him as ‘badly wounded, progressing favourably’. Offered with copied research. 


269 
*China 1900, 1 clasp Relief of Pekin (Jemdr Gird Ali 26" Baluch Infy.), a few scratches, very fine or better £150-200 


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270 
*Africa General Service 1902, 1 clasp Somaliland 1902-04 (1345 Kot Dfdr. Isher Singh, 20 Mule C.), very fine 


£120-150 
271 
*Africa General Service 1902, 1 clasp Somaliland 1908-10 (2412 Mohamed Wein 3/K.A.R.), good very fine 
£100-150 


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o72 
*Tibet 1903-1904, 1 clasp Gyantse (7024 Pte. A. Wood 1st Bn Ryl Fuslrs), very fine £700-900 
273 
*Tibet 1903-04, in bronze (325 Cooly Deo Naran S. & T. Corps), extremely fine £100-120 
274 
*Natal Rebellion 1906, 1 clasp 1906, (Dvr. G. E.Hornby, Natal Field Artillery.), surface knocks and scuffs and swiv- 
el loose, otherwise very fine £150-200 
275 


1914 Star and Victory Medal Pair (6988 Pte. M. Marnell 2/S. Lanes), with copied M.L.C., very fine; with France and 
Germany Star, Canadian Volunteer Service Medal Maple Leaf clasp, U.N. Cyprus and a copy of a D.F.C., extremely fine (6) 
£80-100 


276 

Royal Dublin Fusiliers Great War Family Group: 1914-15 Star Trio (10051 Pte. D. O’Neill. R. D. Fus.) and Great 
War and Victory Medal Pair (8686 Pte. E. O’ Neill. R. D. Fus.), good very fine or better, with related cap badge and copy 
M.I.C.’s for both recipients (lot) £250-300 


DANIEL O’ NEILL was killed in action at Gallipoli on 30 April 1915; he is commemorated on the Helles Memorial. 
EDWARD O’ NEILL received Silver War Badge no. B/1534. 


277 

Great War Casualty Group of Four awarded to Private Leslie Charles Burgess, 32"4 (East Ham) Battalion Royal 
Fusiliers, 1914-15 Star (G-5084 Pte. L. Burgess, R. Fus:), British War and Victory Medals (GS-5084 Pte. L. C. 
Burgess), Memorial Plaque (Leslie Charles Burgess), last in card folder of issue, with two related identity discs, plaque 
cleaned, good very fine or better (4) £180-220 


LESLIE CHARLES BuRGESS was born in Little Wakering, Essex. He enlisted at Shoeburyness in September 1914 and was sent to France in May 
1915. On 20 November 1915 he was wounded and invalided home before returning to France in April 1916. On 15 September 1916 he was again 
wounded, surviving on the battlefield for five days and six nights; however he later died of wounds and exposure at Rouen. He was buried in 
St. Sever, Rouen and is commemorated on the Little Wavering Roll of Honour in St. Mary the Virgin’s Church. Offered with copied research. 


278 
1914-15 Star Casualty Trio (1977 Pte. R. Butler, L’pool R.), extremely fine £120-150 


PRIVATE BUTLER Served with the 8" Battalion. He died of wounds on 21 June 1915 and was buried in the Bois-Guillaume Communal Cemetery. 


279 

1914-15 Star Casualty Trio to Private Edward Glover Whitmore, 2" Battalion Lancashire Fusiliers, 1914-15 Star 
(9136 Pte. E. Whitmore, 2/Lan: Fus), British War Medal (E.G. Whitmore), Memorial Plaque (Edward Glover 
Whitmore), last in card folder of issue, with Buckingham Palace Condolence Slip, Memorial Scroll, box for B.W.M. and 
Victory Medals and forwarding envelopes; Group of Five: 1914-15 Star Trio (452 Sjt. W.J. Corrie K.O. Sco: Bord.), 
Defence and War Medals, with copied obituary notice; B.W.M. and Victory Medal Pair (Lieut. E. H. James), with 
Silver War Badge (B317044), British Red Cross Proficiency in Red Cross Nursing Medal (4988 Edwin H. James), two 
further British Red Cross badges and a pair of Red Cross arm bands; another B.W.M. / Victory Pair (31227 Pte. E. 
Fisher. R. Berks. R.) and also an O.B.E. and Great War Trio miniature group of Four attributed to Capt. Edward J. 
Hagan, Chaplain to H.M. Forces, many extremely fine (lot) £250-300 


EDWARD GLOVER WHITMORE was killed on 4 September 1915 and is buried in the Forceville Community Cemetery. 


280 

Various Great War and Other Medals: 1914-15 Star (LZ. 1711, A. Redding, A.B. R.N.V.R.); British War Medals (6- 
1189 Dvr. A.H. Ashby. R.A. / 15591 Pte. H. Cheetham. K.S.L.I. / 116998 Gnr. T.R. Eaton. R.A. / 7073 Cpl. M.L. 
Head. E. Surr. R. / Ernest D. Miller / erased; Victory Medals (3- L.Z. 6447 E. E. Annand A.B. R.N.V.R. / 28940 
Pte. A.E. Bates. Notts. & Derby. R. / 347 Sep. Ghulam Mohd, 2-107 Prs.); Royal Navy Long Service and Good 
Conduct, George type 1 (217800 H.C. Revell, S.P.O. H.M.S. St. George), Volunteer Force Long Service, Victoria, 
unnamed as issued; France and Germany Star, Defence Medal, War Medal (2); Duke of Connaught’s Masonic medal, 1917; 
together with International Exhibition, 1862, bronze prize medal (F.A. De Vasconcellos. Class IV.), this extremely fine, 
others mostly very fine or better but B.W.M. to Cheetham lacking suspension (18) £250-300 


A. REDDING died on 24 August 1916 while serving with Anson Battalion, Royal Naval Division. A.H. AsuBy died on 25 September 1916 
(C.W.G.C. gives his rank as “Shoeing Smith”). HENRY CHEETHAM died on 22 April 1916. 


281 
Great War M.S.M. Trio awarded to Corporal G.A.V. Sorrell, Royal Engineers, British War and Victory Medals, Army 
Meritorious Service Medal, George V type 1 (141997 Cpl. G.A.V. Sorrell. R.E.), very fine or better (3) £120-150 


M.S.M. London Gazette: 30 May 1919. 


282 

Great War Casualty Trio awarded to Private Fred Turner, 2" Battalion West Yorkshire Regiment, British War 
and Victory Medals (270036 Pte. F. Turner. W. York. R.), Memorial Plaque (Fred Turner), last in card folder of issue, 
extremely fine (3) £100-120 


FRED TURNER was killed in action on 29May 1918 and is commemorated on the Soissons Memorial. 





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283 

Great War Casualty Trio awarded to Private Clair Patrick Couche, 51° Battalion A.I.F., British War and Victory 
Medals (7971 Pte. C.P. Couche 51 Bn. A.I.F), Memorial Plaque (Clair Patrick Couche), last in card case, with 
Memorial Scroll, Buckingham Palace Condolence Letter and Australian Imperial Force booklet containing three photo- 
graphs of Couche’s grave, virtually as issued (lot) £200-250 


CLAIR PATRICK COUCHE, from Perth, Western Australia, enlisted on 30 August 1917, embarked for Europe on 30 October 1917 aboard HMAT 
Aeneas and died of wounds on 8 June 1918. He is buried in the Etertat Church extension. 


284 

A Battle of Jutland Casualty Group, Four: 1914-15 Star (PO 16630 Pte. J.F. Gingell R.M.L.I.); British War and 
Victory Medals (both PO 16630 Pte. J.F. Ginfell [sic] R.M.L.I.); and Memorial Plaque (James Finley Gingell) 

with original forwarding boxes for B.W.M. and Victory and a Memorial Scroll carrying a newspaper cutting in memory of 
Gingell, extremely fine (4) £500-700 


Private JAMES FINLEY GINGELL was aboard H.M.S. Black Prince which was sunk and lost with all hands at the Battle of Jutland, 31st May 1916. 


285 

*Medals awarded to the Sawers Scott Family: A superbly-mounted frame containing the Great War medals and items 
relating to two brothers who were killed in action while serving with the King’s Own Scottish Borderers and to their father, 
who survived them, comprising: 

1914-15 Star Trio and Memorial Plaque (2.Lieut. N.S. Scott. K.O. Sco. Bord. / 2. Lieut. N.S Scott. / Norman 
Sawers Scott); British War and Victory Medal Pair with Memorial Plaque (2. Lieut. I.A.S. Scott / Ian 
Archibald Sawers Scott), each with Memorial Scroll and a mounted coloured portrait photograph, and a trio awarded to 
their father, Captain William E. Sawers Scott, M.D., comprising British War and Victory Medals (Capt. W.E. Sawers 
Scott) and British Red Cross Society Medal for War Service, this unnamed as issued, all extremely fine or better, mounted 
for display in an impressive and heavy tooled leather-bound and initialled triptych-style display frame, also containing a 
silver K.O.S.B. cap badge and two smaller bronze R.A.M.C. badges £1,500-2,000 


NORMAN SAWERS Scott was killed in action at Ypres on 23" April 1915 at the age of 20. He is buried at the Bedford House Cemetery. 


His brother IAN ARCHIBALD SAWERS SCOTT was killed on the first day of The Battle of the Somme, 1° July 1916, aged 19 (attached to 1 Battalion, 
K.O.S.B.). He is buried at Knightsbridge Cemetery, Mesnil-Martinsart. 


A stained glass memorial window to the two brothers was erected at St Chad’s Church, Ladybarn, Lancashire in 1916. By Karl Parsons, the 
legend incorporated in the two-light window itself commemorates Norman whilst the design depicting two knights in armour shows faces in 
the likenesses of both Norman and Ian. The Memorial also includes a Scottish Officer’s sword (replacing that which had originally been Ian’s, 
stolen in 1989) and tablets commemorating both Jan and their father, Captain William Sawers Scott, M.D., who survived them both and died 
on 31 January 1923 at the age of 62. 


286 

Great War and Second World War Group of Seven awarded to Corporal W.J. Smith, Royal Army Ordnance 
Corps, late Army Service Corps: British War and Victory Medals (T4-185631 Dvr. W.J. Smith. A.S.C.), 1939-45 & 
Africa Stars, Defence and War Medals, Army Long Service and Good Conduct Medal, George V type 3 (566380 Cpl. W.J. 
Smith. R.A.O.C.), mounted for wearing, first two fine, others very fine or better (7) £70-100 


287 

Great and Second World War Group of Seven awarded to Lieutenant-Colonel G. M. Welsford, 56" (15t London) 
Divisional Signals, Royal Corps of Signals, late 5" Battalion Kings Royal Rifle Corps: British War and Victory 
Medals (Lieut. G.M. Welsford), 1939-45, Italy Stars, Defence and War Medals, Efficiency Decoration, George VI type 1, 
reverse dated 1943, with 3 clasps all dated 1952 on reverse, mounted for wearing, with related miniatures and two riband 
bars, very fine and better (14) £200-250 


Offered with photocopied commission documents. 


288 
An I.G.S. Pair comprising: India General Service 1908, 1 clasp North West Frontier 1935, impressed (516163 A.C.1. C. 
Rose, R.A.F.) and India General Service 1936, 1 clasp North West Frontier 1936-37, officially engraved (516163 L.A.C. 


C. Rose R.A.F.), star wear on the second, generally good very fine (2) £150-200 
289 

A Second World War Casualty Trio awarded to Sergeant R.H. Seaton, R.A.F., comprising 1939-45 Star, Air Crew 
Europe Star and 1939-45 War Medal, extremely fine, with named forwarding slip (lot) £200-250 


SERGEANT R.H. SEATON (1052401) was Air Gunner aboard Manchester L7287, piloted by Lieut. R.E.R. Paramore, D.F.C. on the night of 6-7 
June 1942 and bound for a target at Emden. The aircraft was one of 5 Manchesters and 35 aircrew lost in the space of just one week by 49 
Squadron; no trace has ever been found of L7287. 


290 

Family Group: Warrant Officer R. Shilling, R.A., Five: 1939-45 & Africa Stars, Defence and War Medals, Army Long 
Service and Good Conduct, Elizabeth II type 1 (830314 W.O. Cl. 2 R. Shilling R.A.), L.S.G.C. in forwarding box and WWII 
medals with slip; together with a pair to Warrant Officer E.N. Morris, A.T.S. [who subsequently became Mrs. Shilling]: 
Defence Medal, Efficiency Medal, George VI type 1 (W. 9819 W.O. Cl. 2 E. N. Morris. A.T.S.), both in forwarding boxes, 
the first addressed to ‘Mrs E.N. Shilling’ and the second with forwarding slip similarly named, extremely fine (7) £120-150 


Efficiency Medal: AO 27/1945. 


201 

Second World War and Palestine Group of Six awarded to Guardsman D. Gurr, Coldstream Guards: 1939-45 
Star, Africa Star with 8th Army clasp, Italy Star, Defence and War Medal, all unnamed as issued, General Service Medal 1918- 
62, 1 clasp Palestine 1945-48 (2670627 Gdsmn. D. Gurr Coldm. Gds.), very fine or better (6) £100-150 


292 

Second World War and Post War Group of Five awarded to Surgeon Lieutenant Commander R.B. Slater R.N.: 
1939-45 Star, Atlantic Star with France and Germany Clasp, Defence and War Medals, Naval General Service 1915-62, 1 clasp, 
Near East (Surg. Lt. Cdr. R. B. Slater R.N.), mounted for wearing, very fine or better (5) £200-250 


293 

Second World War and Post War Group of Five awarded to Wing Commander T.B. Bourke, R.A.F.: 1939-45 & 
Atlantic Stars, Defence and War Medals, General Service Medal 1918-62, 1 clasp, Cyprus (Flt. Lt. T.B. Bourke R.A.F.), 
mounted for wearing, good very fine (5) £120-150 


T.B. BOURKE was appointed Pilot Officer 10 August 1944 and retired with the rank of Wing Commander, 22 September 1967. 
294 


General Service 1918-62 (3), George VI, 1 clasp Palestine 1945-48 (2- EC 10068 Pte. N. Nkabo A.P.C. / AS 6475 Pte. 
P. Phatsoane A.P.C.) and Elizabeth II, 1 clasp Arabian Peninsula (4019166 Ch Tech H.J. York R.A.F.), very fine (3) 


£120-150 
295 
Naval General Service 1915-62, 1 clasp, Yangtze, an official replacement (SSX 849229 J. H. Graham. Ord. R.N. 
Replacement), extremely fine £150-200 
296 
Korea 1950-53, first obverse (22524963 Tpr. E.L. Downing. 5 D.G.), good very fine £120-150 
297 
A Korean War Pair, comprising: Korea 1950-53, first obverse (22225753 Pte. R. Goodbrand, R.A.O.C.) and U.N. 
Korea, unnamed as issued, very fine (2) £120-150 
298 
Africa General Service Medal 1902, 1 clasp Kenya (22526975 Fus. J. Carr. R. IR. F.), a few marks, very fine 
£100-150 
299 
Africa General Service Medal 1902, 1 clasp Kenya (5056 Const Musyemi Mutuki), test mark on edge, very fine 
£50-70 
300 
General Service Medal 1918-62, 1 clasp Cyprus (23351465 Pte. P. L. Montague. MX.), edge bruise, good very fine 
£50-70 
301 


General Service 1962, 3 clasps Radfan, South Arabia, Northern Ireland (23916946 Pte. J.R. Canning R.S.), very fine 
£120-150 


I NORTHER MIRE 
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302 

*General Service 1962, 4 clasps Borneo, Malay Peninsula, South Arabia, Northern Ireland (23909309 Pte. J. Stillie, A 
& SH.), good very fine £250-300 
303 

*Vietnam 1964-73, impressed to an Australian recipient (2785195 A.G. Bernaver), good very fine £250-300 





304 
*South Atlantic 1982, with rosette (Ck. B. Easton D144844F HMS Glamorgan), good extremely fine £3,000-4,000 


CooK BRIAN EASTON was one of fourteen crewmembers to be killed when H.M.S. Glamorgan was hit by an Exocet missile on 12 June 1982, 
having seen much action since the very start of the Falklands campaign when she acted as Admiral Sandy Woodward’s flagship during the 
initial journey south from Gibraltar. 


Offered with photocopies of contemporary newspaper articles relating to the attack on Glamorgan and other copied research. 


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305 

*Iraq, Former Yugoslavia and Afghanistan Group of Six awarded to Sergeant A.G. Furness, 7 (Special Forces 
Chinook) Squadron R.A.F., late Royal Navy, who won a ‘Green Endorsement’ for a Chinook Operation in Southern 
Afghanistan on 10 April 2006 (the only time in the award’s history to date that it has been awarded to a full Crew), compris- 
ing: Campaign Service Medal 1962-2007, 1 clasp, Air Operations Iraq (LACM A.G. Furness D206441L RN); NATO 
Service Medal, 1 clasp, Former Yugoslavia; Iraq 2003-2011, no clasp; Operational Service Medal 2000, 1 clasp 
Afghanistan (Sgt A.G. Furness (D8261253) RAF); Golden Jubilee 2002; and Royal Air Force Long Service and 
Good Conduct, Elizabeth II type 2 (AC RAF), mounted for wearing, generally extremely fine or better (6) £1,500-2,000 


The lot is offered with a framed and glazed ‘Green Endorsement’ Certificate date 31 October 2007, from which the following is taken: 


‘On 10 April 2006 Sgt Furness was number 2 crewman of ZA 675, a Chinook tasked in support of an operation in Southern Afghanistan. 
The initial phase pf the operation called for a 4-ship Chinook of 140 troops into a hostile target. As the number 2 aircraft in the formation 
the crew were required to land their heavy laden aircraft at over 5000 ft amsl, in very poor light levels with severe re-circulating sand and 


dust. Furthermore there was a significant threat in the target area; this was reinforced later in the operation when a fire fight left 4 friend- 
ly soldiers wounded. 


The difficulty of landing a helicopter in these conditions cannot be overstated and despite a test book set-up ZA 675 sustained major dam- 
age to the undercarriage and left hand fuel sponson on landing. Despite this the crew calmly disembarked the assaulting troops and 
assessed the extent of the damage. They quickly realised the severity of the situation and were faced with 2 options; leave the aircraft, which 


would have almost certainly resulted in its destruction, or risk flying it back to Kandahar, almost 200 miles away. Following a brief dis- 
cussion the crew made a calculated decision to attempt to save the aircraft. 


They lifted to the hover and, escorted by one of the other Chinooks departed for Kandahar. They soon realised they had insufficient fuel to 
make their destination and their only option was to refuel from a C130 at the TLZ. Despite the collapsed left hand undercarriage and severe 
re-circulating dust once again, the aircraft was landed next to the C130. Throughout the refuelling process the crew displayed exceptional 


skill, both maintaining the aircraft’s position and in formulating an exemplary solution to a complex problem. With the operation still on- 
going the crew nursed the aircraft back to Kandahar. 


The Crew’s professional approach to a potentially catastrophic situation in an extremely high threat environment was highly commend- 
able and prevented the loss of a very valuable asset, thus avoiding a disastrous start to UK operations in Southern Afghanistan. By his pro- 
fessional actions, exceptional crew cooperation and detailed knowledge of aircraft systems he helped to save a valuable aircraft which, 
because of its special-to-role fit, is in very high demand. Sgt Furness displayed courage, skill and determination in dealing with these 


demanding emergencies that are in the very highest traditions of the Royal Air Force. Accordingly he is awarded a Green Endorsement to 
his flying logbook.” 


SERGEANT FURNESS joined the Royal Navy in late 1985 as a helicopter engineer. After 10 years service he transferred to aircrew, serving on 
Search and Rescue in Cornwall, where he carried out just under 100 rescues. He transferred to the R.A.F., earning his R.A.F. Long Service 
Medal as an Aircrew Cadet [with his Navy service qualifying], and was posted to R.A.F. Odiham to train on Chinooks. From 2003 he served 
with Special Forces Chinook Squadron, completing 4 tours of Iraq and 9 of Afghanistan, as well as other global operations. He left the R.A.F. 
in April 2011 after more than 25 years of military service. 





OTHER MEDALS 


306 
*Indian Army Meritorious Service 1848, an unnamed specimen, rev., arms and motto of the Honourable East India 
Company, extremely fine £150-200 
307 
*Indian Army Long Service and Good Conduct Medal 1848-73, an unnamed specimen of the issue for European 
recipients, first type, with shield of the Honourable East India Company on obverse, good extremely fine £120-150 
308 


*Worlingworth Volunteers Medal 1798, in silver, IOHN HENNIKER MAJOR COMMT. reverse type, edge engraved in capitals 
Rev. Charles Buckle, Treasurer (Balmer The Militia, Fencibles and Volunteer Army of the British Mainland, unpublished 
draft copy 1986, V992), in contemporary leather and velvet-lined case, edge bruising and a few scuffs, generally very fine 


£300-400 
THE REVEREND CHARLES BUCKLE (1756-1831) was Rector of Worlingworth and Southholt, Suffolk, 1780-1815. 
309 
Worshipful Company of Distillers, silver Livery badge, Distiller’s arms, with plain reverse engraved Stephen Child 6" 
April 1835, in case of issue, with loop for suspension, very fine £100-150 


STEPHEN CHILD was a distiller of Stony Street, Southwark. 


310 

Foundation of the Daji Raj High School, Wadhawan, Gujarat, 1885, a presentation silver foundation trowel, 
engraved date 19” November 1885, trident with banner, The Daji Raj High School Foundation Stone laid by Mrs 
Nutt at the installation of Thakursahib Balasinhaji engraved around, with handle tang as made but now lacking a 
handle, good very fine £150-200 


311 

Scottish Volunteer Review 1881, silver medal, by D.O. Smith, bust of Queen Victoria left, rev., standing volunteer 29mm, 
in ‘P. Westren of Edinburgh’ case of issue, extremely fine; Liverpool Scottish brooch, in silver and blue enamel, very fine; 
together with Masonic, Oriental Chapter No 687 (Istanbul), member’s badge, by Spencer, hallmarked Birmingham 1929, in 
silver-gilt and enamels, extremely fine (3) £100-150 


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512 

*City of London Police, Retirement of Detective Inspector R.J. Child, 25 March 1891, bronze-gilt medal, by 
Wilhelm Mayer, bust of D.I. Child left, rev., arms of the City of London, 70mm, in card case of issue, test mark on edge and 
a few minor bruises, good very fine and rare £250-350 


DETECTIVE INSPECTOR R. J. CHILD joined the City of London Police in 1858. In 1890 an improved Pension Act was passed and Child, in com- 
mon with many other long-serving officers, retired. Another example (in bronze) has appeared in auction and it seems likely that the medals 
were commissioned by Child as gifts to colleagues on his retirement. 


313 

Air Efficiency Award, George VI type 1 (752793 Corp. O. S. Anderson R.A.F.V.R.), Africa Star, Defence and War 
Medals, together with related miniature group additionally including a type 2 M.B.E. and a 1939-45 Star, very fine or better 
(10) £120-150 


Air Efficiency Award granted 27 March 1947. 


314 

Imperial Service Medals (4), George V type 2 (John George Jocelyn); George V type 3 (Lewis Thomas Coffin); 
George VI type 1 (Edith Kate Pennett); and Elizabeth II type 1 (Frederick Charles Smith), second in case of issue, third 
in card box of issue, extremely fine (4) £70-100 


JOHN GEORGE JOCELYN: London Gazette: 18 February 1930 (Smith, H.M. Dockyard, Portsmouth); LEwis THOMAS CoFFIN: London Gazette: 15 
September 1931 (Able Seaman, Royal Naval Armament Department, Bull Point); EDITH KATE PENNETT: London Gazette: 12 January 1945 
(Supervisor, London Telecommunications Region). 





Jewelled Military Badges 


315 

4 (Queen’s Own) Hussars, in gold, openwork badge with IV in centre, with regimental title around, 30.7 x 19.3; togeth- 
er with Royal Artillery, in gold, in the form of a flaming grenade, 20 x 9.6mm, , second with suspension loop broken, very 
fine £100-150 


316 
*Royal Fusiliers (City of London Regiment), in platinum and gold and enamels, red-enamelled rose with central bril- 
liant cut diamond, crown and flames set with rose diamonds, 37.2 x 28.7mm, enamel slightly chipped, good very fine 


£350-450 


Ex George A. Von Petterffy Collection and Sotheby’s auction, December 1979. 


o17 

*Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment), in the form of the Order of the Thistle breast star, in white gold and set in 

diamonds, the motto in blue enamel and centre of crown in red enamel, 36 x 28.5mm, in Cartier case, extremely fine 
£400-600 


Ex Major J.L.R. Samson collection. 


318 

*Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment), bar brooch in the form of the Order of the Thistle breast star, in gold and 
enamels, the rays of the star set with diamonds, height 23mm, with additional gold chain and clip suspension, in case of issue, 
extremely fine £300-500 


Ex Major J.L.R. Samson collection and Sotheby’s Jewellery auction, 27 September 1979, lot 92 (offered with a copy of the catalogue). 


319 
*Special Air Service, in platinum and gold, regimental motto in blue enamel, wings set with diamonds, 39.6 x 23.6mm, 
extremely fine £500-700 


Ex George A. Von Petterffy Collection and Sotheby’s auction, 31 July 1980, lot 183. 


320 
*Sudan Defence Force, in platinum, camel and rider set with diamonds, 28 x 23mm, with platinum chain and gold bar sus- 
pension, each end of bar set with ruby cabochon, extremely fine £200-300 


Ex George A. Von Petterffy Collection and Sotheby’s auction, 27 September 1979, lot 167. 





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LIFESAVING MEDALS AND AWARDS 


See also lots 121-129 


521 

*Royal Humane Society, Large Silver Medal, type 1, an early striking from Pistrucci’s dies, reverse engraved SOC: REG: 
HUMAN. GEORG: KEEN. VITAM OB SERVATAM DONO DEDIT. 1830, 51mm, unmounted, light traces of handling but virtually 
mint state, in fitted case £500-700 


329 

*A Fine Crimea War and Double Lifesaving Group awarded to Rear Admiral Edward Franklin, R.N., Four: 
Crimea 1854, 1 clasp Sebastopol, engraved in plain capitals (Commander Edward Franklin. R.N); 

Royal National Lifeboat Institution, silver medal, George IV obverse (Lieut. Edwd. Franklin. R.N. Voted 12 Decr. 
1838.); 

Shipwrecked Fishermen and Mariners Royal Benevolent Society, gold medal, with straight suspension bar 
(Commander Edward Franklin, R.N., 6 July, 1855); and 

Turkish Crimea, Sardinian issue, engraved in plain capitals (Commander Edward Franklin. R.N), 

R.N.L.I. medal with a couple of rim nicks, otherwise generally extremely fine and silver medals toned, mounted for wearing 
(4) £3,000-3,500 


R.N.L.I medal: FRANKLIN, Edward, Lieutenant, R.N.H.M. Coastguard, Hove, 29 October 1838: “During stormy weather, the coal-laden 
brig Friends was wrecked near Hove, Sussex, her crew taking to the rigging. Lieutenant Franklin and two men waded into the sea, threw 
ropes on board and took off the Master and seven men.” 


EDWARD FRANKLIN was born in November 1798 and entered the Navy in March 1810. In the Norge he was present at the attack on New 
Orleans and at the capture of Fort Bowyer. He was promoted Lieutenant in September 1825 after serving in the West Indies and a 
period of convalescence following fever and rheumatism brought on by eleven continuous years of service in the tropics. In November 1830 
he was appointed to the Coast Blockade and while serving with the Coast Guard received a silver medal and letter of thanks for his intrepid 
conduct in swimming off, in a gale, with a rope (all boats being stoved) and saving the lives of eight men belonging to the brig Friends, when 
on shore near Brighton. From a severe cold caught in capturing a smuggler during another gale he lost the sight of one eye, owing to which, 
when combined with acute rheumatism, he was obliged to relinquish his appointment in the Coast Guard in 1839. 


He was promoted Commander in November 1846 and was in charge of a Division of Transports in the Black Sea in May 1854. The Gold Medal 
of the Shipwrecked Fishermen and Mariners’ Society was awarded to him for having risked his life in the preservation of the crew of French 
and English Transports wrecked in the devastating Black Sea Gale of November 11th — 14th 1854 — an event which shortly followed the Battle 
of Inkerman, and which had as much impact on the Allied forces as a military defeat. The storm was worst at the Balaclava anchorage where 
Franklin was based, on a rocky, cliff-lined coast, where ships were dragging anchors, cables were snapping and crews were trying to chop 
down masts to stop their ships from foundering or being driven ashore to provide easy targets for the Russians. The losses of life (French, 
British and Turkish) were about 1,000 in all, around a third of whom were British. Some 50 vessels were wrecked and destroyed, the Marquis 
and the Mary Anne being lost with all hands. Only 6 of the 150 crew aboard the new screw-transport vessel Prince were saved; she had just 
landed the 46" (South Devonshire) Regiment, but not the vital winter clothing or medical supplies she was carrying beneath the ammuni- 
tion. 


On the morning of November 15" Franklin set off early to obtain permission from the flagship to organise a full-scale rescue programme. 
Contemporary accounts of the storm suggest that he took the initiative at the earliest possible moment under the appalling circumstances, 


and many lives were saved amongst the floating wreckage strewn along the coast. 


Franklin became a Captain in July, 1857 and served in this capacity until February 1868. Three years later, in 1871, he was appointed Captain 
Superintendant at H.M.S. Conway, a position he held until September 1881, being promoted to Rear Admiral on his retirement. 


Offered with copied information. 
323 
*Royal Humane Society, Large Bronze Medal, type 2, for Successful Rescue, reverse engraved GEORGE BERRY VIT. OB SERV. 


D.D. SOC. REG. HUM. 1 January 1858, 51mm, with suspension ring and blue ribbon for wearing, good very fine £250-300 


R.H.S. case no. 16105 records “Berry, G., aged 13, River Ribble, Preston”. 





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324 

*Liverpool Shipwreck and Humane Society’s Marine Medal, in silver, second (oval) type with Liver Bird suspension, 
engraved on reverese Presented to Thos. Williams 26 Augt. 1870 and on edge For gallantly jumping into the 
Mersey. & saving a man from being drowned on the 12 Augt. 1870, with original riband brooch fitted with stickpin 
for wearing, correction to engraving of Christian name “Thos.” on reverse, good very fine £300-400 


325 

*Answers Medal for Heroism 1892, in silver, unnamed as issued, crouching lion before sunburst within wreath, FOR BRAV- 
ERY below, rev., HONORIS CAUSA 1n wreath, PRESENTED BY THE PROPRIETORS OF ANSWERS, With old N.G.S. ribbon, swivel slightly 
loose, good very fine £300-350 


326 

*A Lifesaving Pair awarded to Second Officer George D. Lenz of the Maria Rickmers for saving life from the wreck 
of the S.S. Londonian, 1898, comprising: 

Sea Gallantry Medal (Foreign Services), in silver, Victoria small-sized, rev., FOR GALLANTRY AND HUMANITY / FROM THE 
BRITISH GOVERNMENT, edge engraved (George D. Lenz 29" November, 1898.), 33mm; and 

Lloyd’s Medal for Saving Life at Sea, in silver, engraved (Diedrich Lenz “Londonian” 28" Nov. 1898), 36mm, 
extremely fine and toned, mounted for wearing (2) £600-800 


The steamship Londonian under Captain E. B. Lee left Boston, Massachusetts for London on 15" November 1898, with a company of 70 and 
a cargo of grain and 150 head of cattle. After about a week at sea the ship ran into foul weather, increasing later to a gale, and her steering 
gear jammed. She took on water, her engine room flooded, and the unfortunate cattle were driven overboard to lighten the ship which con- 
tinued to drift. On 25" November she was sighted by the Vedamore under Captain Bartlett, who declined to take the Londonian under tow 
but did, under exceptionally harsh gale-force conditions over a two-day period, take off 45 men successfully although one of the Londonian’s 
own boats capsized, with the loss of all its occupants. 


As 28 November dawned the Vedamore could no longer see the Londonian so Bartlett set course for Baltimore, his original destination, 
with the survivors. Meanwhile the uncontrollable and derelict Londonian, still with Captain Lee and seven men on board, remained at the 
mercy of the elements until, at around midnight, one of their flares was seen by the German steamship Maria Rickmers. After a further strug- 
gle lasting many hours a line was secured and all eight men were safely transferred. 


The The Dictionary of Disasters at Sea confirms that 45 men were rescued by the Vedamore and 8 by the Maria Rickmers, while 17 men 
were drowned. 





327 
*C.Q.D. Medal 1909, in silver, unnamed as awarded to crewmembers of the S.S. Republic, Florida and Baltic, 45mm, about 
extremely fine and toned £300-400 
328 


*Edward Medal (Mines), First Class, in silver, Edward VII issue, awarded to F.H. Edgelow in Rhodesia on 
Coronation Day, 1911, engraved (Frederick Holcombe Edgelow.), good extremely fine and well toned, in (slightly 
damaged) fitted case of issue £3,000-4,000 


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“The Park, Salisbury, Rhodesia, S. Africa. 
22nd June, Coronation Day 1911 
ist Class Edward Medal pinned on 
by Newton, Acting Administrator for 
Psyche Indaba” 


London Gazette: 25 April 1911: 


Whitehall, April 21, 1911. His Majesty the King has been graciously pleased to award the Edward Medal of the First Class to Frederick 
Holcombe Edgelow, under the following circumstances: 


‘On the 30" September, 1910, two natives descended a shaft of the Psyche Mine, in Southern Rhodesia, and, as no sign was given to haul 
up the bucket, the natives on the surface concluded that something was wrong below. As Mr. Walsh, the miner in charge, was absent, they 
called to Mr. Edgelow, a mining prospector, who happened to be staying at the camp. He looked down the shaft, which was 110 feet deep, 
and saw the two natives lying unconscious. Although he had little experience of mines, and had never been down lower than 40 feet, he 
immediately descended the shaft with a native; but, when they encountered the gas, the native lost his presence of mind, and gave the sig- 
nal to draw up. On reaching the surface Mr. Edgelow tied a wet towel round his face, and, lashing himself to a rope, descended by him- 
self. He tried to lift one of the natives into the bucket, but before he succeeded in doing so, he felt the effects of the gas and was only just 
able to give the surface to draw up. He was raised to the surface unconscious, and, on being revived sent a note to Mr. Walsh, and again 
prepared to descend. On Mr. Walsh’s arrival, Mr. Edgelow made two more descents with a rope provided with a running loop, and by this 
means he succeeded in bringing both the natives to the surface, although life was found to be extinct. Mr. Edgelow displayed a high degree 
of courage in his persistent attempts to rescue the natives, and ran an imminent risk of losing his own life’. 


Offered with substantial original documentation, including: 


Linen “Miner’s Right” document in Edgelow’s name for gold prospecting in Rhodesia, issued at Salisbury, April 1909 (and also a blank version); 
Original letter from the Office of Secretary for Mines, Salisbury, 26 April 1911, notifying Edgelow of his award; 

Three original letters from the Administrator’s Office, Salisbury regarding the presentation arrangements and relating acknowledgement, 
dated 31 May, 12 June and 27 June 1911, all signed by H. Marshall Hole as Secretary; 

Photograph (illustrated, and a similar copy) of the actual presentation of the medal in Salisbury Park by Acting Administrator Newton dur- 
ing the Coronation Celebrations held on 22 June 1911; 

Various family and other photographs (some taken in the bush and of prospecting camps), also including a studio portrait of Edgelow wear- 
ing his Edward Medal (illustrated); 

Manuscript (and typescript) essays by Edgelow on “A Whirlwind Veldt Fire” (in 1909), several on “Memories of S. Rhodesia”, poetry and 
notes, some work signed with the nom-de-plume ‘Ingoululw’; 

General family correspondence and three newspaper cuttings relating to the award. 


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329 
*A Liverpool Trio awarded to P.C. Charles Powell, comprising: 


Liverpool Shipwreck and Humane Society’s General Medal, in bronze (To P.C. 1564 Charles Powell. For Meritorious 
Service. 28/3/27.) and Liverpool City Police Good Service Medals (2), in bronze, engraved on edge and reverse (Sergt. 


19 “C” Charles Powell. Presented by Watch Committee. 12" April 1941.) and in silver, with clasp SERVICE OVER 30 


YEARS, engraved on reverse (Presented by Watch Committee to Insp. C. Powell 12-4-46), with riband brooches for 
wearing, extremely fine (3) 


£300-400 


330 


*Scout Association Bronze Cross for Gallantry, reverse engraved (J.T. Baker), extremely fine and rare (146 award- 


ed) £800-1,200 


The Bronze Cross was awarded on 22" January 1930 to Rover Scout J.T. BAKER, 1% Tanfield Group, Consett. The citation reads: “For gal- 
lantry in connection with the rescue of two men who had been overcome by fumes in South Garesford, Friarside Colliery on May 17th 1929”. 








30! 
*Society for the Protection of Life from Fire, bronze medal type v, edge engraved (Allan McDonald, Shenley. 8-10- 
38), with silver straight bar suspension and silver riband brooch, extremely fine £250-300 





332 

*A R.N.L.I. and Norwegian Society for Sea Rescue Gold Medal Pair awarded to Coxswain H.E. Petit, St Peter 
Port Lifeboat, Guernsey, comprising: Royal National Lifeboat Institution, Hillary type gold medal, edge engraved 
(Captain Hubert Ernest Petit — Voted 11™ April, 1963), 37mm, with matt finish, dolphin suspension, blue ribbon and 
riband brooch as issued, and Norwegian Society for Sea Rescue, gold medal, reverse engraved (H.E.P. 1963), with loop, 
suspension bar, red, white and blue ribbon and riband brooch as issued, 31.3mm, both extremely fine (2) £5,000-7,000 


R.N.L.I. Citation dated 11 April 1963: 


5-6 February 1963: “The Barnett class lifeboat Euphrosyne Kendal left her moorings at 3.45 p.m. 
in a near gale from the south, rough seas and overcast weather. The 1,995 ton Norwegian m.v. 
Johan Collett, 14 miles west-north-west of Les Hanois lighthouse at the south-west corner of 
Guernsey, in passage from Tunis to Ghent, Belgium, was in difficulty; her cargo of zinc concen- 
trates had shifted. Fourteen of her crew had been transferred, and a South African frigate was 
standing by. When the lifeboat reached her at 6.30 p.m. they found the motor vessel lying 
stopped, beam onto the wind and waiting for a tug. In four runs, Coxswain Petit took off the Chief 
Engineeer and two apprentices before the tug arrived. After the tow had ben connected and the 
wind force had risen to Beaufort strength ten, the Coxswain made six more runs and saved the 
remaining six men. All survivors were landed at St. Peter Port at 6.45 a.m. 


Offered with a photograph of Coxswain Petit (detail illustrated), copied newspaper cuttings and 
further information. 





Orders and Medals awarded to 
General Sir Edward Sabine and to his brother Joseph Sabine 


300 

*A Comprehensively-Documented Group of Awards, Prize and Commemorative Medals awarded to General 
Sir Edward Sabine, K.C.B., D.C.L., L.L.D., F.R.G.S., comprising: 

The Most Honourable Order of the Bath, Civil Division, Knight Commander’s set of insignia, by Garrard, comprising 
neck badge, in 18 ct. gold, London, 1855 and breast star, in silver with gold and red-enamelled centre and gold brooch-pin, 
backplate engraved R. & S. Garrard & Co. / Goldsmiths & Jewellers / to the Crown / 25 Haymarket / London, extremely fine, 
with original [frayed] neck riband and original clasp; 

Arctic Discoveries Medal 1818-1855, unnamed as issued, minor surface marks, extremely fine, with fragment of origi- 
nal ribbon [served aboard Isabella, 1818, Hecla, 1819-20 and Griper, 1823; ‘medal signed for’]; 

International Exhibition, London, 1862, bronze prize medal, edge officially impressed (Major-Gen. Sabine, R.A., 
F.R.S., Juror. Class XIII.), 76.5mm; 

France, Exposition Universelle 1867, bronze medal ‘for Services Rendered’, with die-struck name (Lieutenant 
Général Edward Sabine), 68mm; 

France, Exposition Universelle 1867, bronze medal ‘for International Participants’, also die-struck (Commission du 
Royaume Uni de Grande Bretagne et d’Irlande); 50.5mm; 

France, Exposition Universelle 1867, bronze medal for the Commission Imperiale, 50.5mm; 

Germany, Alexander von Humboldt, bronze portrait medal by Karl Fischer, 1847, rev., KOXMOX, signs of the Zodiac 
around, 63mm [von Humboldt’s monumental work Kosmos was translated in four volumes by Elizabeth Leeves, Sabine’s wife, 
and published between 1849 and 1858]; 

Germany, Karl Friedrich Gauss Memorial Mathematical Prize Medals (2), in silver and in bronze, by Brehmer, both 
unnamed, 70mm; 

prize medals cleaned in the past, good very fine or extremely fine; together with a French bronze portrait medal of King Louis- 
Philippe and Queen Victoria, 1831 / 1843, by Montagny, 60mm, worn and an extensive file of named documents and letters 
relating mainly to Sir Edward’s Appointments and Diplomas as an honorary or corresponding member of numerous world- 
wide scientific societies (see below) (lot) £6,000-8,000 


The lot is offered with a large file of original named documents, notably: 


Original Warrant for KCB, 27" July 1869 

Letter of appointment (in French) as a Knight of the Prussian Order of Merit in the Arts and Sciences, 11'* August 1857 (founded by Frederick 
Wilhem IV, 31°' May, 1842), with statutes and list of members 

Original Bestowal Document as Knight of St Maurice and St Lazarus, 27'" September 1862 

Original Commission as Lieutenant-General in Army, 20" September 1865 

Original diploma from the Physiographiska Sadllskapet, Lund, dated 20" June 1868 

Letter of appointment as a Dignitary of the Imperial Brazilian Order of the Rose, 29" March 1873 

Original diploma from the Gesellschaft naturforschender Freunde zu Berlin, 9 July 1873 


Further original named documents include letters, a manuscript scientific notebook, and honorary membership certificates etc. of numerous 
scientific societies, some on vellum and some with decorative vignettes, amongst which may be noted: Aberdeen diploma, 7 August 1825; 
Manchester, 30" April 1844; Russian Imperial Geographical Society, October 1851; Berlin Institute of Natural Science, 24 April 1853, print- 
ed certificate; Royal Academy of Science, Naples, 10 March 1854; Venice, 15'" April 1857; Accademia Pontificia dei Nuovi Lincei, 4 May 
1858; Philosophical Society of Glasgow, 4" April 1860; Natural Society of Montreal, 215t November 1863; Honorary Fellowship of the Royal 
Society, Edinburgh, 4" December 1865; Swedish Academy of Science, 16'* December 1867, large printed certificate; Vienna, 1t August 1874; 
Brazil, 7 June 1875; France, Academy of Sciences, 1875; Batavian Society of Experimental Philosophy; American Academy of Arts and 
Sciences, Boston; National Academy for the Promotion of Sciences, Washington. 


Digital images of the following documents, taken from originals preserved in Sabine family archives, are also included: 

Copy of Appointment as Gentleman Cadet, 25 January 1803 

Copy of Commission as Second Lieut. in Royal Regiment of Artillery, 22" December 1803 

Copy of Commission as First Lieut. in Army, 20" July 1804 

Copy of Commission as Second Captain in Royal Regiment of Artillery, 24" January 1813 

Copy of Commission as Captain in Royal Regiment of Artillery, 315* December 1827 

Copy of a separate document recording Commission as Captain in Royal Regiment of Artillery, 315t December 1827 and also Captain in Army, 
24th January 1813 

Copy of Letter of Appointment [together with Michael Faraday] to the Admiralty’s Resident Committee for Discoveries, Inventions, 
Calculations and other Scientific Subjects, 31°‘ December 1829 

Copy of Commission as Major in the Army, 10 January 1837 

Copy of Commission as Colonel, 11" November 1837, Royal Regiment of Artillery 

Copy of Commission as Lieut.-Colonel in the Artillery, 25" January 1841 

Copy of a letter (in French) congratulating Sabine on his work on Magnetic North, signed Frédéric Guillaume, Charlottenburg, 18" July 1846 
Copy of Commission as Colonel in the Army, 11'* November 1851 

Copy of Commission as Colonel Commandant in Royal Regiment of Artillery, 9" February 1865 

Copy of Commission Major-General in Army, 14" June 1865 

Copy of named diploma of the Italian Geographical Society 15 May 1870 


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EDWARD SABINE was born in Dublin in 1788 to Joseph Sabine, a member of a prominent Anglo-Irish family. His mother, Sarah Hunt, died 
when he was just one month old and his elder brother was the naturalist Joseph Sabine [see following lot]. 


Sabine was educated at Marlow and at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich. In 1803, at age 15, he obtained a commission in the Royal 
Artillery as a 2nd Lieutenant and was to ending his exceptionally long career as General (see copies of his Commissions included in the lot). 
He was initially stationed in Gibraltar during the Peninsular War but it was in the War of 1812 against the United States that he had his first 
taste of combat. In May 1813, while making for Canada, the English packet-ship Manchester was attacked by an American privateer. In the 
ensuing battle Sabine, who was employed as Manchester’s astronomer, reportedly handled a gun ‘to good effect’. He continued to see action 
in America, particularly the Niagara Campaign where he commanded the batteries at the Siege of Fort Erie. After a short spell in Quebec he 
returned to England and was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society, under whose auspices he was recommended for Captain John Ross’s first 
Arctic Expedition in 1818, again as official astronomer aboard Isabella, being instructed to assist Ross ‘in making such observations as may 
tend to the improvement of geography and navigation, and the advancement of science in general.’ Although the principal raison d’étre for 
the voyage was to find the Northwest Passage, several “objects of scientific curiosity’ were deemed worthy of investigation, such as the loca- 
tion of the Earth’s north magnetic pole and the behaviour of pendulums in high latitudes. Sabine later expressed his feelings at Ross’s deci- 
sion to return south prematurely, as he saw it, as ‘mortification at having come away from a place which I considered as the most interest- 
ing in the world for magnetic observations, and where my expectations had been raised to the highest pitch, without having had an oppor- 
tunity of making them’. A public row ensued when Ross claimed credit for some of Sabine’s work and magnetic researches, published in the 
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. 


Sabine immediately returned to the Arctic with Parry, with whom he enjoyed a much better relationship, in the Hecla (1819-20), accompa- 
nying Parry on his journey across Melville Island. The Admiralty instructed the Expedition’s participants to gather such scientific data as 
‘must prove most valuable and interesting to the science of our country’, observing possible interactions between magnetic needles, atmos- 
pheric electricity and the aurora borealis. They were also to attempt to establish the location of the Earth’s North Magnetic Pole. Sabine pro- 
duced a weekly newspaper for the amusement of the crew known as the North Georgia Gazette and Winter Chronicle - it ran for 21 issues 
and was published on the return to Britain. Of greater scientific importance were his notes and observations on the changes and fluctuations 
in magnetic readings since the previous year, still of value to Polar researchers today. Sabine was awarded the Royal Society’s Copley Medal 
on his return in 1821. 


1823 saw Sabine in the Arctic once more, with Clavering in the Griper. Travelling also to Spitzbergen, Africa and tropical America he worked 
diligently throughout the 1820s on pendulum experiments, the Earth’s divergence from perfect sphericity, and aspects of the ‘Longitude 
Problem’. Even though this particular conundrum had been largely solved by Harrison’s chronometer and its successors, the Board of 
Longitude was not finally abolished until 1828 and Sabine was able to contribute an important statistic — the exact longitudinal discrepancy 
between Greenwich and the Observatoire in Paris. With Michael Faraday and Thomas Young, Sabine was appointed to the Board’s 
Admiralty-based successor, having been granted leave of absence from the army to be ‘usefully employed in scientific pursuits’ by the Duke 
of Wellington. 


In the 1830s he was recalled to military duty in Ireland but his scientific work, especially on terrestrial magnetism, continued unabated. He 
was awarded the Royal Society’s Gold Medal in 1849, became a member of the Royal Commission of 1868-1869 for standardizing weights and 
measures, received honorary Doctorates from both Oxford and Cambridge, was a fellow of the Linnean and the Royal Astronomical Societies, 
and President of the British Association for the Advancement of Science. His name is given to - amongst other places and creatures — the 
Sabine Crater on the moon, which lies near the site of the Apollo XI landing of 1969. 


General Sir Edward Sabine, K.C.B., F.R.S. retired from the Army in 1877 and died at East Sheen, Surrey on 26 June 1883 at the age of 94. 


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334 
*University of Dublin, silver prize medals (2), similar, by Mossop, both with reverses engraved and awarded to Joseph 


Sabine for his Exertions in History, dated 11th June 1788 and 8" April 1789, each with bow for suspension, 54mm, very 
fine; together with related documents (see below) (lot) £400-600 


This lot also is also offered with a substantial file of original named documents, including: 


Commission as Inspector General of Assessed Taxes and Property Duty for Middlesex, etc., with £20 and £10 duty stamps, 23 December 1808 
Commission as an Inspector General of Taxes throughout England and Wales, with £25 duty stamp, 25 April 1817 

Honorary Membership of the Literary and Philosophical Society of New York, 1822, large document with vignette (detail illustrated below) 
Membership of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Society for Promoting Agriculture, 1823, on vellum 

Membership of the Regensburg Botanical Society, 1823 

Honorary membership of the New-York [sic] Horticultural Society, 1824 

Corresponding membership of the Royal Agricultural Society of Agriculture and Botany of Ghent, 1827 

Honorary Membership of the Aberdeenshire Horticultural Society, 1827 

Honorary membership of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society, 1829 

Corresponding membership of the Société Royale, Brussels, 1829 

Membership of the Royal Scientific Society of Norway, 1830 


JOSEPH SABINE F.R.S. (1770-1837), elder brother of Sir Edward Sabine [see preceding lot], was a lawyer, naturalist and horticulturist who was 
appointed Inspector General of Taxes in 1808, a post he held until 1835. He had a lifelong interest in natural history and was an original 
Fellow of the Linnean Society as well as being elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1799. 


He was Honorary Secretary and Treasurer of the Royal Horticultural Society from 1810 to 1830, receiving the R.H.S. Gold Medal. The 
Society’s gardens at Hammersmith and Chiswick were established under his guidance but his aspirations and high ambition for the Society’ 
s expansion resulted in large debts and, eventually, to his resignation. He transferred his enthusiasm to the Zoological Society of London, 
becoming Secretary and then Vice-Chairman and adding significantly to their collections of animals. He was in particular a renowned 
ornithologist in his day; he received and categorised a specimen of a new gull discovered by his brother Edward during John Ross’s First 
Arctic voyage in 1818, which he named Sabine’s Gull (Larus sabini) in Edward’s honour. 





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OTHER BRITISH ORDERS 


300 
*Most Honourable Order of the Bath, Military Division, Grand Cross breast star, in wire and cloth, with paper back- 


ing, this inscribed Small No 17 OXY, and with four steel clips for suspension, 96.5 x 93.5, contained in old but later case, good 
very fine £500-700 


336 
*The Royal Victorian Order, Grand Cross set of insignia, comprising sash badge, in silver-gilt and enamels, and breast 
star, in silver, with gilt and enamelled centre, both numbered 364 on reverse, in a later case by Spink, extremely fine, with 


sash (lot) £1,500-2,000 
337 

The Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, type 2, Civil Division, Commander’s neck badge, in silver-gilt and 
enamels, in case of issue including ‘instructions for wearing’ document, virtually as issued £300-350 





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338 

*Baronet’s Badge, United Kingdom issue, with border of roses, thistles and shamrocks, in 22 ct. gold and enamels, by R.S, 

London, 1913, reverse engraved Leon of Bletchley Park 1911, good extremely fine, with original neck riband, in fitted case 

of issue; together with a miniature trio of 1939-45 Star, Defence and War Medals as worn by the 3" Baronet Sir Ronald George 

Leon and digital copies of photographs of the Mansion and Park, circa 1914-26, taken from privately-held archives (lot) 
£4,000-6,000 


SIR HERBERT SAMUEL LEON (11 February 1850 — 23 July 1926) was an English financier and Liberal Party politician, now best known as 
the main figure in the development of the Bletchley Park estate in Buckinghamshire, which he had purchased in 1883. He was created 
ist Baronet Leon of Bletchley in 1911. 


In 1938 the estate, including the mansion and some 58 acres, was acquired from the 2" Baronet, Sir George Edward Leon, by Admiral 
Sir Hugh Sinclair. Sinclair, head of the Secret Intelligence Service, showed great foresight in selecting what may have seemed to the 
casual observer an unlikely site ‘for use in the event of war’. Shrouded in total secrecy during 1939-45 and for decades thereafter, 
Bletchley’s immense contributions to the Allied war effort continue to be researched, analysed and reconstructed, with individual rev- 
elations and pieces of fresh information still coming to light regularly. 


Strict security rules have meant that hardly any wartime photographs of Bletchley exist in the public domain. The images included here, 
mostly previously unpublished, offer interesting insights into the nature and layout of the house and grounds in the gentler, peaceful 
inter-war years. 


See also inside back cover illustration. 


GALLANTRY AWARDS 


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339 
*A Battle of Inkerman Distinguished Conduct Medal Trio awarded to Private Samuel Vickery, ist Battalion 


Coldstream Guards, who was later appointed Orderly to Florence Nightingale at Castle Hospital, Balaklava, 
and Scutari Hospital, comprising: 

Distinguished Conduct Medal, Victoria, impressed (Saml. Vickary [sic] Coldstream Guards); 

Crimea 1854-56, 4 clasps, Alma, Balaklava, Inkermann, Sebastopol, depot impressed (S. Vickery Coldm. Guards); 
Turkish Crimea, British issue (unnamed), first two with edge bruising, otherwise very fine (3) £6,000-8,000 


Ex Morton and Eden auction, 25 May 2005, lot 450. 


Distinguished Conduct Medal: Recommended 2 April 1855, for Gallantry at the Battle of Inkerman, 5 November 1854; also granted a gratu- 
ity of five pounds; medal ordered on 5 May 1855. 


16 D.C.M.s were awarded to the Coldstream Guards for the Crimean War. 


SAMUEL VICKERY was born in Kenton, Devon, on August 1826. He enlisted in the army and was attested at Exeter on 10 August 1844. He 
appears to have enjoyed a chequered career; promoted Corporal in January 1847 he was then confined for a week in October 1848 and on his 
release was reduced to Private. The following month he was promoted to Corporal once more, but a year later he was again confined, this 
time for four days. Once more he was reduced to Private on his release, and retained this rank for the remainder of his service. He neverthe- 
less was given two good conduct rings, on 5 November 1851 and 20 August 1854. Although his name is given on his service papers as ‘Vicary’, 
he clearly signed as “Vickery’on his Statement of Service and Discharge Papers.. 


In 1854 Vickery sailed with his battalion to the Crimea, and saw action in the battles of the Alma, Balaklava and Inkermann and at the Siege 
of Sebastopol. Following these battles a hospital was established at Balaklava, and by June 1855 patients were being removed to better con- 
ditions at Scutari under Florence Nightingale’s care. He was appointed her Orderly-cum-Bodyguard and is mentioned by I.B. O’Malley, 


Florence Nightingale 1820-56. 


Vickery was discharged from the Army at his own request on 3 December 1856, and returned to Devon where he worked as a labourer. He 
was killed in an accident at Thorverton Mills on 9 December 1871, when he had the misfortune of having his leg caught in a chaff-cutting 


machine. 


The lot is offered with a quantity of mainly photocopied research. 


340 
A Great War Military Medal to a recipient who subsequently received a Second Award Bar (675441 A. Bmbr. W. 
Holmes. A.275 / W. Lancs: Bde. R.F.A. T.F.), edge bruised, very fine £400-500 


Military Medal: London Gazette: 19 November 1917 (Everton); Bar to Military Medal: London Gazette: 13 September 1918. Offered with dis- 
charge certificate and related riband bar. 


341 

A Salonika Campaign Military Medal Trio awarded to Private J. Bathgate, Army Veterinary Corps, attached 
Cameron Highlanders: Military Medal, George V (S-30051 Pte. J. Bathgate. 2 Cam’n Highrs:), British War and 
Victory Medal (7660 Pte. J. Bathgate. A.V.C.), extremely fine (3) £300-350 


342 

Great War Military Medal Trio, awarded to Bombardier J. Steward, Royal Field Artillery: Military Medal, George 
V (780902 Bmbr. J. Steward 311/Bde. R.F.A.), British War and Victory Medals (Bmbr. R.A.), extremely fine, with 
Fourth Army Award Certificate dated 17 May 1918 (3) £250-300 


343 
Great War Military Medal Group of Four awarded to Private Tom Green, 4th Battalion Coldstream Guards: 


Military Medal, George V (15585 Pte. T. Green 4/C. Gds.), 1914-15 Star, British War and Victory Medals (C. Gds.), 
Victory Medal renamed, otherwise extremely fine (with copied research) (4) £300-350 


Military Medal: London Gazette: 3 July 1919 (Nottingham). Tom GREEN died on 7 November 1918 and is buried in Wilford, Nottinghamshire. 


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344 

*Family Group: 

A) Staff-Serjeant William Dunn, Royal Army Ordnance Corps, Six: Military Medal, George V (S-5008 Pte.-A.L. 
Sjt: W. Dunn. R.A.O.C.), 1914 Star (Pte. A.O.C.), British War and Victory Medals (S. Sjt. A.O.C.), Liverpool Council of 
Education white metal school attendance medals (2), these both named, first four mounted for wearing; 

B) Staff-Serjeant William Richard Dunn, Royal Army Service Corps, Pair, Defence and War Medals, in forwarding 
box, with Army Council slip and Transfer to the Reserve Certificate, extremely fine or better (8) £300-350 


Military Medal: London Gazette, 24 January 1919: ‘No. 18 Ord. Amman. Sec. (Everton)’. 


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345 
*Great War Distinguished Conduct Medal Group of Five awarded to Bandsman W. Barrett, 1% Battalion 


Somerset Light Infantry:, Distinguished Conduct Medal, George V, 1914 Star and Bar (6150 Bndsmn W. Barrett. 
1/Som L.I.), British War and Victory Medals, Army Long Service and Good Conduct, George V (Pte. Som. L.I), mounted 
for wearing, 14 Star detached and with related riband bar, good fine; together with W.W.II group of 4, 1939-45, France and 
Germany Stars, Defence and War Medals, in forwarding box addressed to Mr. G. H. Barrett, extremely fine (9) £700-900 


Distinguished Conduct Medal: London Gazette, 14 January 1916 (and citation - 11 March 1916): 
‘For conspicuous gallantry in bringing in wounded men from exposed places under heavy rifle, machine-gun and shell fire. Throughout the 
campaign Bandsman Barrett has displayed great bravery and devotion to duty.’ 


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346 
*Great War Military Cross Group of Four awarded to Captain Donovan Drewery, Durham Light Infantry, late 


Northumberland Yeomanry: Military Cross, George V, 1914-15 Star (1165 Pte. D. Drewery. North’d. Yeo.), British 
War and Victory Medals (Capt. D. Drewery), extremely fine, with two sets of related miniatures (12) £600-800 


Military Cross: London Gazette, Birthday Honours, 1918. DONOVAN DREWERY subsequently became well-known as a racehorse owner. In 1968 
Man of the West won the Hennessy Gold Cup at Newbury and in his memory the Donovan Drewery Memorial Hurdle was held at Ascot. 


347 
Great War Military Cross, George V, attributed to Captain George Raphael Buick Purce, R.A.M.C., in case of issue, 


extremely fine £500-600 
London Gazette, New Year’s Honours, 1918. 


‘BARNEY PURCE (1891-1950) was born in Co. Antrim. After graduating from Queen’s University of Belfast he became house surgeon at the 
Royal Victoria Hospital before joining the R.A.M.C. He was made M.O. to the 8th Battalion, Ulster Rifles and later served with the 100th 
Field Ambulance and 48th C.C.S. After returning to civil medical practice he became a renowned specialist in thoracic surgery. In 1947 he 
was elected President of the Association of Thoracic Surgeons of Great Britain and Ireland; he was also President of the Ulster Medical Society 


Offered by direct descent, with photocopy of Purce’s obituary and a photograph of him as President of the Association of Thoracic Surgeons 
of Great Britain and Ireland, November 1947. 





The Fleming Brothers: James (left) and George (right) 


348 

*Great War Brother’s Casualty Group: 

A) Captain George Fleming, 1° Battalion Royal Scots Fusiliers, late 4'* Battalion Royal Scots, Seven, 1914-15 Star 
(2. Lieut. G. Fleming. R. Sc. Fus.), British War and Victory Medals (Lieut. G. Fleming), Territorial Efficiency Medal, 
George V (217 Sgt. G. Fleming R.S.), this a post WWII issue (in box of issue), 9 carat gold Queen’s Edinburgh Rifles 
Shooting Championship medal (Presented by Major T.D. Rhind 1913 won by Sergt. G. Fleming 4" Battn.), Service 
Rifle Championship bronze medal, unnamed, City of Edinburgh & Midlothian Association bronze medal (S.S.C. Aggregate 
1911), with Memorial Scroll and miniature Book of Psalms, this inscribed ‘George Nov. 25" 1915 

B) Acting Captain James Fleming, 11th Battalion Royal Scots, late 4" Battalion, Five, Military Cross George V, 
British War and Victory Medals (Lieut. J. Fleming), 9 carat gold 4 Battalion Royal Scots Colonel’s Medal (1913 won by 
Lee. Corpl. J. Fleming), Caledonian Challenge Shield bronze medal (unnamed), with related miniature M.C., Memorial 
Scroll, photograph of his grave and copy photograph of the two brothers, extremely fine or better (13) £1,200-1,500 


GEORGE FLEMING was the eldest son of Mr. W. S. Fleming, Edinburgh; he was born in 1884, and attended George Watson’s College 1895-1901. 
He was latterly a partner in the firm of Messrs J. Fleming and Co., sugar and spice merchants, Edinburgh. On leaving School he enlisted in 
the Queen’s Edinburgh Rifles Volunteer Battalion, and proved a notable marksman both at the local and the Bisley meetings. On the creation 
of the Territorial Force he joined the 4th Royal Scots, and was mobilised as Colour Serjeant of ‘F’ Company. He had become C.S.M. when he 
received a commission in the ist Royal Scots Fusiliers. He was sent to France in July 1915 and was promoted Lieutenant in 1916. He was 
Acting Captain in command of his company (he was gazetted Captain three months after his death) when he died on 18 July 1916 of wounds 
received four days earlier. He is buried at Abbeville Cemetery. 


JAMES FLEMING, his younger brother, was born in 1892 and also attended George Watson’s College, 1903-9. He studied the technical side of 
the bakery business at Glasgow Technical College and in Germany, and joined his father’s firm in 1912. Like his brother he was a keen 
Territorial and marksman. He was mobilised in 1914 as a Lance-Serjeant in the 4th Royal Scots and was commissioned into the 11th Battalion 
in March 1915; he was sent to France in January 1916 and went through the Battle of the Somme. He held the rank of Acting Captain when 
he was killed in action at Arras on March 21 1917. He is buried in the Faubourg d’Amiens Cemetery, Arras. 





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*A Great War Ace’s D.F.C., A.F.C. Group awarded to Captain J.S. Stubbs, R.A.F., the highest-scoring Airco 
DH.9 Bomber Pilot, credited with 11 victories in total, Five: 

Distinguished Flying Cross, unnamed and undated as issued; 

Air Force Cross, unnamed and undated as issued; 

1914 Star (M.7/247. S. Stubbs, Ord. Sea. R.N.V.R. Hood Bttn. R.N.D.); 

British War Medal and Victory Medal (both Capt. J.S. Stubbs. R.A.F.), 

rim bruise on B.W.M., extremely fine or better, D.F.C. and A.F.C. both cased (5) £12,000-15,000 


D.F.C.: London Gazette, 2 November 1918 (Lt. (T./Capt.) John Stevenson Stubbs (S. Lancs. R.) and 2nd Lt. John Bernard Russell): 
“Captain Stubbs is a fine leader and a skilful tactician, who during the last few months, has led fifty-one reconnaissances and raids over 
enemy lines with marked success, frequently extricating his formation, when attacked by large numbers of scouts, by his coolness and judg- 
ment. One evening this officer, with Lt. Russell as Observer, in company with another machine, encountered ten enemy aeroplanes. 
Regardless of their superiority in numbers, he at once attacked and shot down one. By skilful manoeuvring he enabled his Observer to bring 
down another; the remainder of the enemy were driven down to their lines; he then completed his reconnaissance and returned home. 
Leaving the other machine behind, he again crossed the enemy lines; he bombed a train and attacked some mechanical transport at 1,500 
ft. altitude. This particular exploit is highly creditable to both these officers, the machine in which they flew being unsuitable for low bomb- 
ing attacks; moreover, they were subjected to very heavy anti-aircraft and machine-gun fire.” 


A.F.C.: London Gazette, 2 November 1918 (i.e. the same date as the D.F.C.) 


JOHN STEVENSON STuBBS, born in Walton-on-the Hill, Lancashire in September 1894, was to become the highest-scoring ace to fly the under- 
powered, unreliable and unlamented DH.9. By the end of August 1918, Major-General Trenchard had declared that the aeroplanes ‘could no 
longer be considered service type bombers and that the losses which must be expected they would suffer did not justify again sending them 
over the line... ’, making Stubbs’s success with the DH.9 all the more remarkable. 


Jack (or, later, “Stubby”) Stubbs initially joined the R.N.V.R. and was present at Antwerp in 1914 with the Royal Naval Division (although not 
entitled to a clasp to his 1914 Star). Early in 1915 he transferred to the 3rd Battalion of the Prince of Wales’s Volunteers (South Lancashire 
Regiment) and was promoted on probation to 2" Lieutenant 
on 5 June 1915 which was confirmed, following training at 
Liverpool, on 21 January 1916; a week later he was promoted 
to Temporary Lieutenant. 


Early in 1917 Stubbs became a Flying Officer seconded from 
the Garrison Battalion, Liverpool Regiment and served in 
France with No. 27 Squadron, Royal Flying Corps. On 9 May 
1917 he was wounded, requiring repatriation; upon recovery he 
was posted to No. 2 Training Depot at Lake Down (near 
Salisbury), where he was a Flying Instructor from 19 
September 1917 to 24 March 1918. In December 1917, by which 
time Stubbs was Acting Flight Commander, he was posted ini- 
tially to No. 107 Squadron and, following the official formation 
of the Royal Air Force on 1 April 1918, was appointed a Captain 
in No. 103 Squadron (on 21 April), and ordered to France. 








Within a month of his return to the Western Front piloting the two-man Airco DH.9 bomber, Stubbs and his Observer, 24 Lt. C.C. Dance, 
scored their first victory. Improbably enough for a bomber such as the D.H.9 they succeeded in destroying an enemy observation balloon at 
Seclin, Pas-de-Calais. On 6 June, together with two other crews, they shared one Fokker D.VII destroyed by fire and another sent down out 
of control. The pairing of Stubbs and Dance also scored a Pfalz D.III out of control at La Bassée on 4 July. 


With 2" Lt. J.B. Russell in the Observer’s seat there were four further victories in July and August (and their joint recognition in the D.F.C. 
citation). With Dance as Observer once more, another Fokker D.VII was sent down out of control on 30 August while Stubbs was to destroy 
two further D.VIIs with 2"¢ Lt. C.G. Bannerman as his Observer. 


On 24 October 1919, Stubbs was granted a short service commission as a R.A.F. Flying Officer but transferred to the unemployed list in 
January, 1920. Following a brief period back on active service in 1921, he joined the R.A.F. Reserves in 1923. In July 1924 he moved to 
Rawalpindi where he worked for the Attock Oil Company before joining the Indo-Burma Petroleum Co. Ltd., where he remained until retire- 
ment in 1954. He died in 1963. 


The lot is offered with substantial documentation, including Stubbs’ two Pilot’s Flying Log Books, first dating from 21 November 1916-24 
March 1918, second 25 March-7 November 1918, from which the following extracts are taken: 


‘4-3-17 2.30 to 6.00. Defensive Patrol-1" show, plenty of archie, damn good shooting.’ 
‘8-4-17 12.40 to 3.25. Bombing Aulnoye-bombs wouldnt’ drop. 2/112 lbs archied all way home. Prop. hit, engine renewed.’ 
‘9-5-17 12.30 to 2.45. Boné-Bombing 2-112 bombs, wounded in 2 places. Machine collapsed after landing, engine ran for one 


hour with little water, petrol tank and radiator burst. Rudder, elevator & 2 longerons shot through.’ 
(Following this incident he was grounded until 20 September, when he renewed his flying with No. 2 
Training Depot Station, Lake Down, Salisbury, where he remained until his return to France 9 May 1918.) 


‘6-6-18 2.50 to 5.05. Ham-2-112lb bombs, m/c shot by Hun, Hun down in flames. 30 Huns chased formn. but did not attack” 

‘7-6-18 5.00 to 7.05. Nesle-2-112lb bombs OK’s 15 Trip’s chased formn. Running fight.’ 

‘8-6-18 10.00 to 12.15. Fresnoy-Les-Roy- 2-112lbs on billets in town.’ 

‘9-6-18 6.15 to 7.25. Hainvillers -2-112lb bombs. Roving commission dropped bombs on transport. Then 20 mins. ground 
strafing. Had a really good time but very hot while it lasted. Huns advanced 3 miles from Montdidier to 
Lassegny.’ 

‘10-6-18 6.35 to -7.45. Roving commission. 1 bomb blew up small battery dump, one on horse transport. More firing at 
ground, not so many targets as previous show. Huns advanced still further. Extending gains from 
Montdidier to Noyon.’ 


‘11-6-18 10.20 to 11.20. | Another roving commission, more transport blown up. Firing on troops & transport. Saw preparations 
for counter attack. Some battle! French troops pouring up to front in battle formation, followed by 
numbers of tanks. The barrage was terrific from the French guns. Huns throwing over liquid flame. 
Watched all this from 400 to 800 feet (later) French regained a good deal of ground. McGee and 
Thompson went west.’ 


ee 


SELF in SHH. a, (Lancing) 





‘13-6-18 10.45 to 11.50. | Orvillers-Sorel—2-112lb bombs on village, very cloudy, saw 11 E A., one shot hit Bayley in the leg but he 
returned aerodrome.’ 


‘26-6-18 6.15 to 8.40. Tournai-2-112lb bombs, several bursts in town & on railway sidings, archie damn good.’ 


‘4-7-18 8.00 to 9.50pm. Armentieres, Seelin, Warrin, Estairs sector-Dusk reconn. Scrapped 15 Pfalz machines and got one, fight 
lasted 1 hour. Huns broke flight, and we continued reconn. but saw nothing owing to darkness.’ 


‘22-7-18 6.00 to 8.30. Lille-2-112lb bombs, scrap with 10 Huns for 2 hour.’ 


‘21-7-18 7.30 to 9.15. Dusk reconn. Scraped 10 Huns, two down out of control. Continued reconn. Then dropped 4 25 lbs Mills, 
2 on Laventie, 2 on Ambers, then fired all ammunition on transports and troops.’ 


‘25-8-18 9.35 to 11.40. Lommé-2-112lb bombs, scrapped 10 Huns; Fokker bips., 1 crashed, 1 out of control.’ 


ComPLete Aviators !! 








Capt. J.S. Stubbs (centre) 


‘25-8-18 5.00 to 6.50. Lommé-2-112lb bombs, 2 direct hits on billets, machine written off. Direct hit by dud archie at 14,200, 
longeron, dashboard, gravity tank and centre section shot away.’ 


‘20-8-18 10.20 to 11.50. |Laventie-Bar St. Mars-Photography, met 20 Huns, observer got 1 down out of control.’ 
‘6-9-18 10.05 to 12.15. Fives-2-112lb bombs on railway, scrap 7 Huns, Dance got 1 down, crashed.’ 
Also included are: 


Army Book 136, listing where Stubbs was stationed from 19 May-3 October 1918, with list and details of squadron members killed, wounded 
or missing; 


Army Book 439, with service details; 

R.N.V.R. Service Certificate; 

Central Flying School, Upavon Graduation Certificate 4 January 1917; 
National Health Insurance card - Naval Reservist, 4 June 1916; 

Field Medical Card giving details of wounds received on 9 May 1917; 


War Office letter to his mother informing her of his admittance to the General Hospital , Rouen, 
23 July 1917; 


Notification of Arrival in England post card listing his admission to Prince of Wales Hospital 
Marylebone, 26 July 1917; 


General Sir W.R. Birdwood’s Routine Orders 15 August 1918 announcing Stubbs’ award of the 
Distinguished Flying Cross; 


Temporary Commission as Lieutenant Royal Air Force 1 November 1918; 


A weighted coloured streamer marker for dropping from aircraft, in its original leather pouch, in 
excellent condition; 


Further copied documentation, including newspaper articles and photographs, and a memory 
stick with much further information. 





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350 

*The Well-Documented Western Front M.C., Italian Front Al Valore Militare, Palestine O.B.E. and Dunkirk 
D.S.O. Group of Fourteen awarded to Brigadier Robert Dermot Barnes (Dan) Perrott, Royal Engineers, 
Distinguished Service Order, George VI, reverse of suspension bar dated 1940, Order of the British Empire, type 2 Military 
Division, Officer’s breast badge, Military Cross, George V, (reverse engraved Lieut. R.D.B. Perrott R.E. 95" Field Co. R.E. 
7h Division Bullecourt 10 May 1917), 1914-15 Star (2 Lieut. R.D.B. Perrott. R.E.), British War and Victory Medals (Capt. 
R.D.B. Perrott), Victory Medal with Oak Leaf, India General Service 1908-35, 3 clasps, Afghanistan N.W.F. 1919, Waziristan 
1919-21, Waziristan 1921-24 (Capt. R.E.), General Service Medal 1918-62, 1 clasp, Palestine (Major), 1939-45, Africa Stars, 
Defence Medal, War Medal with Oak Leaf, Coronation 1937, ITaLy, Al Valore Militare (reverse engraved Lieut.(A/Capt.) R.D.B. 
Perrott, M.C., R.E., 95"* Fld. Co. R.E. 7 Div., La Battaglia Sulla Piave Octobre 1918), mounted for wearing, the G.S.M. 
mounted incorrectly after the Second World War medals, very fine and better (14) £6,000-8,000 


BRIGADIER PERROTT was killed in action on 29 June 1942; he is commemorated on the El Alamein Memorial. 
D.S.O.: London Gazette, 27 August 1940 (general citation). The following is taken from the official recommendation: 


‘Lieut-Colonel Perrott as C.R.E. of this division, during the fighting from May 10“ to June 1“. has stood out above all others, as a magnificent 
type of the British Officer. Apart from his ordinary duties as an Engineer, which he performed perfectly, his specialised work on demolitions 
was beyond all praise. His tasks were many, intricate and in many cases dangerous and he never failed. At one period he held a part of the 
River Scheldt with his Engineers in close contact with the enemy — for 24 hours he stayed on the river himself on command. His achievements 
up to this date well-earned reward, but his finest work was still to come. On the beaches at Dunkirk, he organised and built the piers out of 
lorries and local material which enabled thousands of British and French to embark — this was done under heavy shelling, bombing and 
machine-gunning over days. Regardless of fatigue or danger, he was always there’re where most needed, organising, encouraging and direct- 
ing. Finally when his task was done and his Engineers embarked, he too left for England under my orders, but on arrival home he learned 
that some of his Sappers were still in Dunkirk. This remarkable man took the next Destroyer back to France to satisfy himself that all his men 
would be brought back safely. There is no need for me to emphasise how such magnificent conduct at this, influences others.’ 


O.B.E.: London Gazette, 11 May 1937: 
‘For valuable services rendered in the field in connection with the operations in Palestine, during the period April-October, 1936.’ 


M.C.: London Gazette, 18 July 1917: 

‘For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty. He was in command of a large carrying party, and led them through a heavy barrage to 
an exposed position. He there proceeded to dig and wire a strong point close to the enemy. His fine example and disregard for danger 
enabled the work to be successfully accomplished.’ 


AL Valore Militare: London Gazette, 20 May 1919. The following is a translation of the original Italian citation: 


‘From 23-26 October 1918 he carried out countless night time reconnaissances in the Piave, gathering intelligence in the face of extreme 
danger and displaying exceptional courage. On many occasions he crossed the river showing great strength in extremely strong currents, 
accomplished even before the situation on the Grave di Popadopoli Island became clear. He confronted danger, which was always present, 
and conducted himself with true magnificence.’ 


Mentioned in Despatches: London Gazette: 14 December 1917, 21 May 1918, 23 July 1937, 15 December 1942. 


ROBERT DERMOT BARNES (‘DAN’) PERROTT enrolled as a Gentleman Cadet at the Royal Military Academy on 14 August, 1914. He was commis- 
sioned as a 2nd Lieutenant in the Royal Engineers on 10 February 1915, arrived in France on 20 July 1915 and served there until December. 
He spent the next nine months at the R.E. Training Depot, Aldershot, returning to France in August. Serving in both France and Italy he was 
wounded on three occasions. After the war he spent three months at the School of Mechanical Engineering, Chatham. 


From August 1919 to June 1920 he served on the North West 
Frontier, being engaged in the construction of the Khyber 
Ropeway. The 19-mile aerial ropeway carried up to 200 tons 
of freight from the railhead at Jamrud to British military 
posts in the Khyber Pass during the period between the Third 
Afghan War and the opening of the Khyber Railway. Perrott 
returned to England in June 1920, attending a further course 
at the School of Mechanical Engineering. He returned to 
India in April 1922, serving subsequently as Garrison 
Engineer (Jamrud), Garrison Engineer (Sahur sub-district) 
and Staff Officer, R.E. Northern Command Rawalpindi, final- 
ly leaving India in March 1927. 


After 6 years or so in the U.K. where he served with 54" Field 
Company, and latterly as Staff Officer to the Chief Engineer 
Southern Command where he received his promotion to 
Major in September 1930, he embarked for Egypt. In 
January 1934 he was appointed C.O., 42 Field Company. In 
May 1936 he was appointed Acting Chief Engineer for 
Palestine. In 1936 the old city of Jaffa, due to its warrens of narrow alleyways, had become a haven for snipers; patrolling the area was becom- 
ing daily more dangerous for both police and military personnel who risked being shot from overhead. It was decided to open up the city by 
constructing two wide roadways intersecting the centre, involving the demolition of ancient buildings in the way. Perrott managed the proj- 
ect with meticulous care; several ancient mosques were uncovered and he ensured that none of these were touched until local religious and 
civil bodies could deal with them with all due ceremony. For his service in Palestine he was rewarded with the O.B.E. and in March 1937 he 
was posted to the Suez Canal as Chief Engineer, Canal District, Moascat Ismailia where he remained until June 1938. On his return to 
England he was promoted Lieutenant-Colonel. 





Beaumont Hamel, drawn by Perrott, dated 26th February 1917 


At the end of January 1940 Perrott was appointed Chief Royal Engineer, 1 Division, France and was involved in the retreat from Belgium and 
the evacuation from Dunkirk. The story of the final days of the B.E.F. in France is well-documented in the citation for his D.S.O. but an anec- 
dote from Henniker, M., An Image of War gives a light perspective on Perrot’s character: “There, sitting on a deck chair [on Bray beach, 28 
May 1940], with a Bren-gun in one hand and a mug of tea in the other, was Colonel Dan Perrot... ...there had just been an air raid and 
about a dozen Stukas had bombed the beach. Dan had not moved from his deckchair, for he was a man of amazing calm. “Young man,” he 
said genially when the aircraft had gone, “I fire a lot of ammunition, but I don’t seem to hit much.” I could not resist it and said to him, 
“Perhaps Sir, it’s because you haven't got a game licence.” He smiled and said, “Perhaps that is the reason, but they are also out of season.’ 


In February 1941 Perrott was appointed Chief Engineer, 10 Corps, HQ Middle East. In August, after a journey of almost three months avoid- 
ing enemy shipping, he landed at Suez and from thence to El Alamein. From August to October 1941 Brigadier Perrott was Chief Engineer 
for the construction of the E] Alamein Line. At the end of October they were to leave the El Alamein Line (nobody foreseeing at the time that 
it would be much needed again later, following the fall of Tobruk). Perrott was sent to Damascus to build a line of defences to halt the 
Germans if they were to come through Turkey; the line was bigger than that at E] Alamein but fortunately it was never put to the test. 


In May 1942 Rommel attacked Gazala, west of Tobruk. Almost from the beginning things went wrong and the HQ 10" Corps withdrew 
towards Egypt, moving some 150 mile by day and camping by the roadside at night. As they approached Mersa Matruh they heard Tobruk 
had fallen, and the remnants of the 8 Army had withdrawn from the frontier. The first plan was to make a stand at Mersa Matruh but due 
to confusion of orders the 1°t Armoured Division withdrew too quickly, and the 50" Division and HQ 10" Corps were surrounded. 


On the night of the 28-29 June orders were given to break out and make their way back to E] Alamein. The HQ 10" Corps formed into two par- 
ties: the senior Staff Officers with General Holmes and Brigadier Perrott tried to make their way directly to Alexandria via the coastal road, while 
the remainder drove inland before turning eastward. The latter party mostly got through safely but Holmes’s and Perrott’s convoy of six cars man- 
aged to encounter the Germans and only two (including Holmes’s) succeeded in getting through. Perrott’s was one of the four which did not 
escape. Brigadier Perrott was officially reported as missing, and no further news was heard until the Germans were driven back to El Alamein 
and the ground over which the 10" Corps had fought could be retraced. It was then that a grave erected by a German, with the name Perrott, was 
discovered. 


The lot is offered with the following original documentation: 


Warrants of Appointment for the D.S.O., O.B.E. and Al Valore Militare; 

Letter relating to the presentation of the D.S.O. to his widow from the War Office, 24 August 1943 and the Central Chancery 24 September 1943; 
Mention in Despatches certificates (3), 7 November 1917, 7 April 1918, 4 December 1936; 

Named forwarding document for the 1937 Coronation Medal; 

Two sketch books, one containing 64 coloured drawings made in France, 1916-17 and 34 drawings (some coloured) relating to the remark- 
able Khyber Ropeway (which was to be demolished in 1925), December 1919 - April 1920; 

Two letters relating to his award of the O.B.E. - one from the Palestine Police congratulating him on the award, 23 May 1937, the other con- 
cerning the presentation at the British Embassy, Cairo 17 November 1937; 

Letter from the Governor of the Canal informing Perrott of the arrival of King Farouk’s train at Ismailia Station, 27 February 1937; 

Letter from Alec Lee, HQ 2"! Corps, congratulating Perrott on his award of the D.S.O.; 

Original documents relating to Brigadier Perott’s missing in action and death (5): 

War Office Telegram reporting him missing in action, 16 July 1942; a letter from Captain Bernard Jarvis, Intelligence Officer to Mrs Perrott, 
concerning the events of 28-29 June 1942 and stating his then-held belief that Brigadier Perrott had survived, 23 August 1942; a later letter 
from Major Charlow Harry written while a prisoner-of-war, giving similar details of the events; letter from the War Office Casualty Branch 
confirming his death, 28 May 1943; and a letter of condolence from Colonel Ernest Mackintosh, 24 June 1943. 


The lot is also offered with copies of later letters from comrades-in-arms relating to his various services and a quantity of copied documen- 
tation, including extracts from war diaries. See also the following lot for his father’s medals. 


ao! 

A Pair awarded to Captain William George Perrott, Royal Engineers, father of Brigadier R.D.B. Perrott [see pre- 
ceding lot], comprising Victory Medal (Capt. W.G. Perrott) and FRANCE, Légion d’Honneur, Third Republic, Knight’s breast 
badge, in silver-gilt and enamels, this chipped, generally very fine (2) £150-200 


Légion d’Honneur: London Gazette, 14 July 1917. 


Offered with original named vellum warrant for the Légion d’Honneur, dated 4 August 1917, and biographical details. 





Ex lot 352 
352 
*The K.B.E., Western Desert M.C. and Croix de Guerre Group of Thirteen awarded to Sir Hugh Richard Deare 
Oldman, Durham Light Infantry, seconded Aden Protectorate Levies, late East Yorkshire and Norfolk 
Regiment, subsequently Military Secretary and Commander of the Army in Muscat and later Omani Defence 
Secretary and one of the major participants in the coup of 1970 which placed Sultan Qaboos on the throne of 
Oman, comprising: 
Order of the British Empire, Civil Division, Knight Commander’s set of insignia, comprising neck badge, in silver-gilt and 
enamels and breast star, in silver, with gilt and enamelled centre; 
Order of the British Empire, Military Division, Officer’s breast badge; 
Military Cross, George VI, reverse dated 1942; 
1939-45 Star, Africa Star with 8" Army clasp, Italy Star, France and Germany Star, Defence and War Medals; 
General Service Medal 1918-62, 1 clasp, Arabian Peninsula (Lt. Col. H.R.D. Oldman. M.C. Emp. List.); 
France, Croix de Guerre avec Palmes; and 
Pakistan, Republic Medal 1956, 
K.B.E. set mounted in a glazed display frame and with case of issue, others (except the last) mounted for wearing, very fine 
or better (13) £4,000-6,000 


K.B.E., New Year’s Honours 1973; O.B.E., New Year’s Honours 1961 (Employed List 1; Seconded to 
Aden Protectorate Levies); M.C., London Gazette: 24 September 1942 (in recognition of gallant and 
distinguished services in the Middle East). 


The lot is offered framed and glazed warrants of appointment to the K.B.E. and the O.B.E, framed and 
glazed commission as Lieutenant dated 24 July 1945, two photographs, including one of Sir Hugh 
Oldman in uniform wearing his orders and decorations, riband bar and related buttons and rank 
badges etc. 


For Colonel Sir Hugh Oldman’s Omani Order, see lot 64. 





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353 

*Essen Raid Distinguished Flying Medal Group of Four awarded to Flight Sergeant John Henry Prior, 49 
Squadron R.A.F., who was killed when his Lancaster was shot down off Texel, comprising: 

Distinguished Flying Medal, George VI type 1 (4375981 F/Sgt. J. H. Prior. R.A.F.); 


1939-45, Air Crew Europe Stars, War Medal, 


with Air Ministry forwarding box and Condolence Slip, extremely fine (4) £3,000-4,000 


D.F.M.: London Gazette, 20 June 1944, ‘with effect from 5%" March 1943’. 


JOHN HEnry Prior worked for the Borough of St Pancras Treasurer’s Department. In February 1940 he was given permission to enlist in H.M. 
Forces and served in No.18 R.F.T.S., March-April 1941. In June 1941 he transferred to No. 4 A.O.N.S., in September he moved to No.1 A.A.S. 


and in December to No. 14 O.T.U.. 


In May 1942 he joined 49 Squadron and took part in his first raid as Bombardier over Dusseldorf on 15 August. Between then and his death 
on 5 March 1943 he took part in 26 operations, including raids on Osnabruck, Frankfurt, Nuremberg, Bremen, Wilhelmshaven, Essen (16 


September), Munich, Wismar, Cologne, Genoa, Turin, Berlin and Hamburg. 


On 5 March 1943 his Lancaster III, piloted by Sergeant Thom and with Flight Sergeant Prior as navigator, left R.A.F. Fiskerton at 19.20 to 
attack the Krupp works in Essen. The raid comprised 442 aircraft and hit 53 buildings within the Krupp complex. Sometime after 10pm their 
aircraft was shot down over the North Sea approximately 10 miles west of Texel in Northern Netherlands, with the loss of all crew. 


Flight Sergeant Prior is commemorated on the Runnymede Memorial. 


The lot is offered with the following documentation: 


Pilot’s Flying Log Book with entries from March-April 1941; 
Observer’s and Air Gunner’s Flying Log Book with entries from June 1941-March 5 1943 (the last entries being added later); 


Letter from Borough of St. Pancras granting him permission to enlist; 


Letter from the R.A.F.V.R. acknowledging his enrolment application, 16 May 1939; 
Eight letters and a telegram (seven from the Air Ministry and one from the Red Cross) concerning his status as “missing”, March-October 


1943 and two letters of condolence; 
Memorial Scroll and Buckingham Palace Condolence Slip; 

Letter announcing payment of £20 D.F.C. winner’s gratuity to his widow, 13 August 1945; 

Group photograph No 8 Air Observers Course with names of sitters below and with signatures on reverse; and 
Various newspaper cuttings, some relating to the Essen raid, and a photocopied photograph of Prior in civilian wear. 


304 


*Second World War Distinguished Flying Medal Group of Five awarded to Flight Sergeant Frederick 
Stebbings, 9 Squadron R.A.F., Distinguished Flying Medal, George VI type 1 (1232755 F/Sgt. F. Stebbings. R.A.F.), 
1939-45, France and Germany Stars, Defence and War Medals, with Air Ministry forwarding box, good very fine or better 


£1,800-2,200 
D.F.M. London Gazette: 20 July 1945. 


The following is taken from the official recommendation. 


‘This Non-Commissioned Officer has completed 32 operational sorties as Mid Upper Air Gunner 
These Sorties have included many requiring long flights through areas strongly defended by 
enemy fighters. On the 25" July, 1944, during a night attack on Prouville the aircraft in which 
this N.C.O. was flying was caught in searchlights and, by excellent co-operation with the Rear 
Gunner, Flight Sergeant Whitfield, an attacking M.E. 109 was foiled and a J.U. 88 successfully 
fired on by both Gunners. This latter enemy aircraft broke off the engagement apparently out of 
control. Shortly afterwards a further attack developed from an M.E. 109, and again as a result 
of accurate advice to his Captain, the attack by the fighter failed to materialise. On 26 
September, 1944 during a night attack on Karlsruhe an M.E. 410 was driven off as the result off 
accurate fire from Flight Sergeant Stebbings and the Rear Gunner. Flight Sergeant Stebbings 
and Flight Sergeant Whitfield have proved themselves to be an excellent operational team.’ 


The lot is offered with: 


Navigator’s, Air Bomber’s and Air Gunner’s Flying Log Book with entries from October 1943 - 


August 1945, listing 41 Operational sorties including Stebbings’s final sortie on 25 April 1945 - the 
raid on the Eagle’s Nest; 


Warrant of Appointment to Warrant Officer, 5 June 1945; 
Copy of Recommendation and studio photograph of the recipient (illustrated). 





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*Post War British Empire Medal, Second World War and Post War Group of Nine awarded to Chief Engine 
Room Artificer James Murison Creswell, Royal Navy, British Empire Medal, Military Division, Elizabeth II (C.E.R.A. 
James M. Creswell, P/MX 693915), France and Germany Star, Defence and War Medals, Naval General Service 1918-62, 
2 clasps, Palestine 1945-48, Near East (C/MX 693915 J.M. Creswell A/E.R.A. 4 R.N.), Korea 1950-53, Elizabeth II type 
1 (E.R.A. 3), U.N. Korea, Campaign Service Medal 1962-2007, 1 clasp, Borneo (MX C.E.R.A.). Royal Navy Long Service and 
Good Conduct, Elizabeth II type 2 (A/C.E.R.A. H.M.S. Caledonian), first in case of issue, others mounted for wearing, 
the NGS with last two digits of number officially corrected, generally very fine or better (9) 


£500-700 
British Empire Medal: New Year’s Honours 1970. 





356 
*The Unique Tibet Victoria Cross and India D.S.O. Group awarded to Lieutenant (later Colonel) John Duncan 
Grant, V.C., C.B., D.S.O., Twelve: 


(i) Victoria Cross, suspension bar and reverse centre engraved (Lieut. J.D. Grant. 8'* Gurkha Rifles / 6 July 1904); 
(ii) The Most Honourable Order of the Bath, Military Division, Companion’s neck badge, in silver-gilt; 

(iii) Distinguished Service Order, George V; 

(iv) Tibet 1903-1904, 1 clasp Gyantse (Lieut. J.D. Grant. 8 Gurkha Rifles); 

(v) 1914-15 Star, impressed at Calcutta mint (Maj. J.D. Grant, 1/8/ Gurkha Rfls.); 

(vi) British War Medal (Lt. Col. J.D. Grant.); 

(vil) Victory Medal, with emblem for Mention in Despatches (Lt. Col. J. Duncan. Grant.); 


(viii) India General Service, 3 clasps Afghanistan N.W.F. 1919, Mahsud 1919-20, Waziristan 1919-21 (Maj. (A/Lt. 
Col.) J.D. Grant, V.C., 3/11/ Gurkha Rfls.); 


(ix) Defence Medal; 

(x) Silver Jubilee, 1935; 

(xi) Coronation, 1937; 

(xii) Coronation, 1953, 

C.B. cased as issued and others all mounted for wearing, British War and Victory medals with corrections to naming (prob- 
ably made at the Calcutta mint), generally extremely fine (12) £200,000-250,000 


Victoria Cross: London Gazette, 24" January 1905: 

‘On the occasion of the storming of the Gyantse Jong on 6th July, 1904, the storming Company, headed by Lieutenant Grant, on emerging 
from the cover of the village, had to advance up a bare, almost precipitous, rock-face, with little or no cover available, and under a heavy 
fire from the curtain, flanking towers on both sides of the curtain, and other buildings higher up the Jong. Showers of rocks and stones 
were at the time being hurled down the hillside by the enemy from above. One man could only go up at a time, crawling on hands and 
knees, to the breach in the curtain. 


Lieutenant Grant, followed by Havildar Karbir Pun, 8" Gurkha Rifles, at once attempted to scale it, but on reaching near the top he was 
wounded, and hurled back, as was also the Havildar, who fell down the rock some 30 feet. 


Regardless of their injuries they again attempted to scale the breach, and, covered by the fire of the men below, were successful in their 
object, the Havildar shooting one of the enemy on gaining the top. The successful issue of the assault was very greatly due to the splendid 


example shown by Lieutenant Grant and Havildar Karbir Pun. 


The latter has been recommended for the Indian Order of Merit’. 








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C.B.: London Gazette, 3'! June 1929 (Birthday Honours): 
Colonel John Duncan Grant, V.C., D.S.O., Indian Army, Deputy Director, Auxiliary and Territorial Force, India 


D.S.O.: London Gazette, 19 December 1922 (‘to be dated 234 October 1921’): 
Lt.-Col. John Duncan Grant, V.C., 13 Rajputs, Indian Army 
‘For distinguished service rendered in the Field with the Waziristan Force, 1920-1921.’ 


Mentions in Despatches include: Army Headquarters, Simla, 24 July 1917: 
‘For valuable service rendered in connection with the War. The War Office have stated that his name will not be published in the London 
Gazette, but it is requested that an entry may be made in his record of service.’ 


Generally known as “Jack”, JOHN DUNCAN GRANT was born at Roorkee, India, on 28 December 1877, the son of Colonel Suene Grant, R.E. and 
his wife Caroline, née Napper (daughter of Colonel Napper, Bengal Staff Corps). Educated firstly at Manor House School, Hastings, 
Cheltenham College (1890-95) and then Sandhurst, Grant was commissioned as 2" Lieutenant (unattached) on 22 January 1898. He briefly 
joined the Indian Staff Corps and was appointed to the 30" (Punjab) Regiment in 1899 before his promotion to Lieutenant on 22 April 1900 
following service with the Malakand Force, after which he transferred to the 44" (Gurkha Rifle) Regiment, which was to be renamed the 8 
Gurkha Rifles in 1902. 





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PER. PHAR! TONG. Xmas marning? 1993, 


Pet os teas: Os 
sity! “ss » ~~ 
inf 


Grant was wounded in a ‘fracas’ at Phari Jong, 8th January 1904. 


Taking the ‘Great Game’ into the 20" Century, the stated object of Younghusband’s Mission to Tibet was to negotiate with the Dalai Lama. 
Britain, fearing that a clandestine deal with Nicholas II might produce a back door through the ‘Roof of the World’ for Russian encroachment 
into Sikkim and India, was making a pre-emptive move with political and military considerations delicately poised. However there were bar- 
riers on the way to the sacred city of Lhasa, including the strategically located Gyantse Jong, likened by some British observers to a landlocked 
Rock of Gibraltar. Jack Grant’s VC action was witnessed by many observers, including the Press. Of the events of 6" July 1904 The Times’s 
correspondent Perceval Landon wrote: 


‘About two o'clock Colonel Campbell, to whom had been committed the command of the attacking force, sent across to Pala village, where 
the General was watching operations with his staff, urgently recommending that an attack should be made at once upon the extreme east 
part of the upper works of the jong. The rock of Gyantse is so steep that it seemed accessible nowhere except along the main approach 
which was well defended. 


But at the point which Colonel Campbell chose there was just a bare possibility of scaling the rock. It was a fearful climb, and the top of it 
was crowned by a well-made wall flanked by two projecting bastions. At first the General was unwilling to press forward any further that 
day, and was in some doubt whether to accede to this request. He determined, however, to be guided by the advice of Colonel Campbell on 
the spot. At a little past three, a concentrated fire from all points was ordered to be directed upon the wall at the head of this steep climb. 
The common shell used by the ten-pounders was now employed with terrific effect, and one could see, second by second, a large ragged 
hole being torn open at this point. Clouds of dust arose and slowly drifted away to the west in the slight breeze, and whenever a lull in the 
cannonade allowed a clear sight, the breach was wider by a yard or two. A constant cataract of stone and brick fell down the face of the 
rock below, which here was almost sheer for forty feet. It was not shell alone that did this work. Magazine fire was concentrated at the 
same point, and under this whistling canopy of ball and shell, the Gurkhas were soon seen moving upwards and onwards from the hous- 
es at the base of the rock. It was a moment tense with excitement, Lieutenant Grant was in charge of the storming party, and soon the first 
figures appeared over the belt of houses and trees which hem in the rock on this side. Instantly the fire redoubled, and from three points a 
converging fire hammered and bit upon the wall above the heads. 


Absolutely confident in the skill of the gunners, the Gurkhas climbed on. Not a Tibetan was seen on the wall above, but through the loop- 
holes of the bastions a few shots were fired, at what was becoming point blank range, and caused one or two casualties among the little 
figures clambering up on their hands and knees. 


—E — —————__— — 


| THE ILLUSTRATED LONDON NEWS, JvULy 10, 1904.— 37 





| THE CAPTURED, -TIBETAN” GIBRALTAR: GYANGTSE FORT, TAKEN BY THE BRITISH, JULY 6. 
 Tradps NE 7 mB.RA. 
F ieee Sedge 30.m.BA 


a gem a 















Ion 


7 
a~ “* ~ 
te 


Tue Hero oF tun Sveerssert Assaver: 


Liserenanr Geant. 





An annotated view of the attack, as seen by the Illustrated London News 


To those who watched from a distance, it seemed as if more loss was being inflicted when again and again one of the escalading force was 
knocked backwards by the masses of stone and brick dislodged by our shells. The steepness was so great that a man who slipped almost 
necessarily carried away the man below him also. But little by little the advance was made, and conspicuous in front of the small compa- 
ny was Grant, with one Sepoy, who was clearly determined to rival his officer in one of the pluckiest pieces of work ever known on the 
Indian frontier. The men now reached a point fifteen or twenty feet below the level of the breach, and it was no longer safe to allow the 
cannonade to continue. The guns had been tested with a success which almost surpasses belief. The chief danger lay in striking too low 
and exploding the shells on the outside, but not a single missile had struck the rock at the base of the wall. The marksmanship displayed 
was astonishing; inferiority in the gun itself was the only real danger to be feared, but these new ten-pounders seem to have reached 
mechanical perfection for all practical purposes. 


Just at this moment, when the General himself was issuing orders that the fire should cease, the thin high piep of the Ghurka bugler cried 
again and again from the distant rocks in the four shrill consecutive notes which call for silence, and silence reigned. Then, uncovered by 
our guns, the last desperate climb was made, and up the higher ridges of an ascent so sheer that it was almost impossible for our men to 
protect themselves, one or two of these little figures scrambled. They reached at last the crumbling wreckage of the Tibetan wall. 
Lieutenant Grant and his faithful follower were the first two men over, and the great semi-circle of the watching British force held their 
breath for a second to see if they would be at once shot down. For the moment it was two men against all the enemy that were in the jong 
— for the third man slipped and carried away in his fall his immediate successor — and it was patent enough to us all that if the Tibetans 
had but reserved their fire and waited in the bastions, they might well have picked off, one by one, each man as his head appeared above 
the breach... ’ 


As Brian Best has pointed out, Havildar Karbir Pun would undoubtedly also have been awarded the VC had the statutes so allowed in 1904. 
In fact a Warrant extending eligibility to Native Officers and Men was to be signed by the King in 1911 (see ‘John Duncan Grant — The Army’s 
Highest VC’, included in The Journal of The Victoria Cross Society, 15‘ edition, October 2009 for a detailed account and biography), but as 
it happened Grant’s Cross was to be the last award before the Great War. He received it from the King at Buckingham Palace on 24 July, 1905 
and he married Kathleen Freyer in London on 19 January 1907, his Captaincy in the 8 Gurkhas being confirmed 3 days later. During 1908 
he attended the Staff College at Quetta and, following various Indian postings, embarked for New Zealand where he served on the Imperial 
General Staff, Otago District, arriving in Dunedin on 14 November 1911 with the temporary rank of Major in the N.Z. defence forces. 


On the outbreak of War in August 1914 he returned to India before 
being appointed Brigade-Major, 35" Indian Infantry Brigade with 
orders to join the Tigris Corps, charged with the relief of Sir Charles 
Townshend’s Anglo-Indian Force besieged in Mesopotamia at Kut. 
Already wounded twice in Tibet, Grant was more seriously injured in 
the thigh at Orah on 13 January 1916 and was repatriated to England, 
where he convalesced at Lady Ridley’s Hospital in London. After 
‘light duty’ in England until Spring 1917, Grant’s sailing orders for 
return to India were revoked in favour of a temporary secondment to 
II Anzac Corps, his pre-war experience in New Zealand no doubt car- 
rying weight with the Chief of Staff. As a Major (antedated back to 1 
September 1915), he briefly served with the Anzacs in France before 
embarking again for India, in the Nagoya out of Marseilles, on 16 
August 1917. 


In May 1918 Grant was once more on his way to Kut, disembarking 
at Basra as Acting Lieutenant-Colonel in command of 3 Battalion, 
11 Gurkha Rifles. However after return to India and being sta- 
tioned at Manmad in the Bombay Presidency, he was able to enjoy 
some extended leave before going with the 3/11" to the Third Afghan 
War (D.S.O., India General Service Medal with 3 clasps). For a peri- 
od in 1921 he assumed command of a Training Battalion of the 13” 
Rajput Regiment before returning to the Gurkhas in command of 1° 
Battalion, 10° G.R.. Between 1925 and 1928 he was Assistant 
Adjutant General, Army H.Q., India and was promoted a full Colonel 
on 2 September 1926. Coinciding with his retirement, he was award- OAK ROOM. 

ed the C.B. in the Birthday Honours List of 1929, and in 1934 he was TROCADERO RESTAURAN?Y 
appointed Honorary Colonel of the 10" Gurkha Rifles. 


THE POTALA, LHASA, 


Piccadilly Circus, W. 


July 6th, 1905. 
During the Second World War Grant served with the Home Guard in 


London. He attended the 1960 Gurkha Association Dinner in the 
presence of the King of Nepal and was perhaps the oldest recipient 





present at the fourth VC & GC reunion, in the presence of Her Cover of the menu for the Anniversary Dinner 
Majesty the Queen Mother, on 16 July 1964. He died in February, held on 6th July 1905 
1967 at the age of 89. 


The following documents are included in the lot: 


Original Indian Army Records of Officers’ Services, several leaves with detailed entries covering the period 1898-1926; 

A file containing further original named documents or official file copies, including Ordinary Transport Certificate, 30 December 1904, rec- 
ommendation for promotion to Captain, Shillong, July / August 1906, Mention in (Indian) Despatches, 24 July 1917, Casualty Forms and var- 
ious reports; 

Copies of two personal letters sent by Grant to his uncle (Arthur Grant (1865-1948), who served in the 4" Gurkha Rifles), the first from 
Gyantse Camp, dated 7'" July ’o04: 

“You will have seen that we snaffled the jong yesterday... ... we started going up a rocky slope when the Tibetans at once started heaving 
stones & also firing... ...several men were hit by small bore bullets- including a flesh one behind my knee- just a scratch- the approach to 
the breach was bestly steep and all loose stones & mud which kept slipping from under one. However we finally made an extra effort & got 
in. My Q.M. havildar was A.1 and got in first... ... The G.O.C. congratulated us and Iggulden told our C.O. this morning that the general 
had wired to the Cin C saying how well the 8 G.R. had done which is satisfactory...... we had 18 casualties in the regiment during the day 
and about 4 occurred as we were going up to the breach — the monastery caved in today...” 

and the second from Lhassa [sic] dated 5" August ’04, giving, inter alia, further details of the storming of Gyantse and Grant’s view of the 
role played by the Royal Fusiliers; 

Original letter of congratulation on the VC: “My dear Jack- You are a brave fellow...” from Grant’s mother Caroline, dated ‘July 7"; 

Copy of a letter from Grant’s uncle Arthur to his father, dated 8/7 04: 

“My dear Suene, I do feel proud of old J & his Goorkhas & so thankful that he was not bowled over altogether storming the Jong on the 6th 
July. It must have been a real tough business and with any luck Jack ought to get something out of it... ”; 

A copy of the V.C. citation in Grant’s hand made on Agra Club notepaper and entitled Extract from the Overland Mail of 27/1/05 / London 
Gazette 24/1.05; 

A November 1904 Indian newspaper cutting entitled “The Tibetan Despatches’; 

Original menu for the Tibet Mission & Force Dinner held at the Trocadero Restaurant on the first anniversary of Grant’s VC action, 6" July 
1905 (illustrated); 

Original named invitation to the VC Dinner held at the House of Lords on 9 November 1929; 

Photograph of Grant in uniform and wearing his medals, circa 1950; 

Copies of further documents, cuttings and photographs from family archives, including Grant’s first Commission, 22 January 1898; 
Original named forwarding documents for 1937 and 1953 Coronation Medals; 

Original programme for the 1956 VC Centenary Reception at the Guildhall, with newspaper cutting; 

An old Army & Navy Stores card box in which the medals have been stored, inscribed ‘From Colonel J.D. Grant Cranmer Court S.W.3”; 

A recent detailed report by David J. Callaghan F.G.A., former Director of Hancocks of London, regarding the fabric and finish of the VC itself, 
which shows several points of technical interest. 


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